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Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2) , A. Riggio (2) , A. Papitto (3) , M.T. Menna (3) (1) Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche ed Astronomiche, Università di Palermo Via Archirafi 36- 90123 Palermo Italy (2) Università degli Studi di Cagliari Dipartimento di Fisica SP Monserratu-Sestu KM 0.7, 09042 Monserrato Italy (3) I.N.A.F.- Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma via Frascati 33, 00040 Monteporzio Catone (Roma) Italy Funasdalen (Sweden) 25 – 30 March 2008

Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

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Page 1: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Cool discs, hot flowsThe varying facesof accreting compact objects

Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review

T. Di Salvo(1)

L. Burderi (2), A. Riggio(2), A. Papitto(3), M.T. Menna(3)

(1)  Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche ed Astronomiche, Università di PalermoVia Archirafi 36- 90123 Palermo Italy

(2)  Università degli Studi di Cagliari Dipartimento di FisicaSP Monserratu-Sestu KM 0.7, 09042 Monserrato Italy

(3) I.N.A.F.- Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma via Frascati 33, 00040 Monteporzio Catone (Roma) Italy

Funasdalen (Sweden)25 – 30 March 2008

Page 2: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Astronomer at work

Page 3: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Millisecond radioPulsars

B ~ 108 – 10

9 G

Low mass companion(M ~ 0.1 Msun)

Low mass X-rayBinaries

B ~ 108 – 10

9 G

Low mass companion(M ~ 1 Msun)

Progenitors (Pspin >> 1ms)

End products (Pspin ~ 1ms)Accretion of mass from the companion causes spin-up

The “classical” recycling scenario

Page 4: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

The Recycling Scenario

Field Field DecayDecay

Radio PSR Radio PSR offoff

AccretionAccretionRadio PSR Radio PSR onon

Page 5: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Confirmed by 10 (transient) LMXBs which show X-ray millisecond coherent pulsationsConfirmed by 10 (transient) LMXBs which

show X-ray millisecond coherent pulsationsKnown accreting millisecond pulsars (in order of increasing spin period):

IGR J00291+5934: Ps=1.7ms, Porb=2.5hr (Galloway et al. 2005)Aql X-1 (*): Ps=1.8ms, Porb=19hr (Casella et al. 2007)SAX J1748.9-2021: Ps=2.3ms, Porb=8.8hr (Altamirano et al. 2007)XTE J1751-306: Ps=2.3ms, Porb=42m (Markwardt et al.

2002)

SAX J1808.4-3658: Ps=2.5ms, Porb=2hr (Wijnands & van der Klis 1998)HETE J1900.1-2455: Ps=2.7ms, Porb=1.4hr (Kaaret et al. 2005)

XTE J1814-338: Ps=3.2ms, Porb=4hr (Markwardt et al. 2003)XTE J1807-294: Ps=5.2ms, Porb=40m (Markwardt et al. 2003)XTE J0929-314: Ps=5.4ms, Porb=43.6m (Galloway et al. 2002)SWIFT J1756.9-2508: Ps=5.5ms, Porb=54m (Markwardt et al. 2007)

Known accreting millisecond pulsars (in order of increasing spin period):

IGR J00291+5934: Ps=1.7ms, Porb=2.5hr (Galloway et al. 2005)Aql X-1 (*): Ps=1.8ms, Porb=19hr (Casella et al. 2007)SAX J1748.9-2021: Ps=2.3ms, Porb=8.8hr (Altamirano et al. 2007)XTE J1751-306: Ps=2.3ms, Porb=42m (Markwardt et al.

2002)

SAX J1808.4-3658: Ps=2.5ms, Porb=2hr (Wijnands & van der Klis 1998)HETE J1900.1-2455: Ps=2.7ms, Porb=1.4hr (Kaaret et al. 2005)

XTE J1814-338: Ps=3.2ms, Porb=4hr (Markwardt et al. 2003)XTE J1807-294: Ps=5.2ms, Porb=40m (Markwardt et al. 2003)XTE J0929-314: Ps=5.4ms, Porb=43.6m (Galloway et al. 2002)SWIFT J1756.9-2508: Ps=5.5ms, Porb=54m (Markwardt et al. 2007)

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International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Light Curves of 5 AMSPs

All the 10 known accreting MSPs are transients, showing X-ray outbursts lasting a few tens of days.Typical light curves are from Wijnands (2005)

X-ray Outburst of 2002

Page 7: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

WhereWhereare are they?they?

(reconstructio(reconstruction of AMSPs n of AMSPs position in position in

the Galaxy)the Galaxy)

Page 8: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Disc Ram Pressure ~ MdotDisc Ram Pressure ~ Mdot

Disc–Magnetic Field InteractionDisc–Magnetic Field Interaction

RRmm = 10 B = 10 B884/74/7 Mdot Mdot-8-8

-2/7-2/7 m m1/7 1/7 kmkm

Magnetic Pressure ~ BMagnetic Pressure ~ B22

Rco = 15 P–32/3 m1/3 km

RLC = 47.7 P–3 km

Page 9: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Accretion conditions(Illarionov & Sunyaev 1975)

Accretion regimeR(m) < R(cor) <

R(lc)

Pulsar spin-up

• accretion of matter onto NS (magnetic poles)• energy release L = dotM G M/R* • Accretion of angular momentum acc= dL/dt = l dotM where l = (G M Rm)1/2 is the specific angular momentum at Rm

M.

Page 10: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Propeller phase

M.

Propeller regimeR(cor) < R(m) <

R(lc)

No spin-down can be observed while accreting onto the

NS• centrifugal barrier closes (B-field drag stronger than gravity)• matter accumulates or is ejected from Rm • accretion onto Rm: lower gravitational energy released• energy release from the disc L = GM(dM/dt)/R*, = R*/2 Rm

Page 11: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Threaded disc model

Romanova et al. 2004

Neg. Threading Torque Zone

Neg. Threading Torque Zone

Pos. Threading Torque Zone

Pos. Threading Torque Zone

Magnetospheric radiusMagnetospheric radius

Corotation radius

Total Torque on the NSTotal Torque on the NS

Rappaport et al. 2004Rappaport et al. 2004

3co

coNS

μGmrtM=tΓ

9r

2

Page 12: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Photon Arrival Times reported to the Solar System barycenter.

Timing TechniqueTiming Technique

Photon Arrival Times corrected for the source orbital motion:Photon Arrival Times corrected for the source orbital motion:

t = tarr – x sin(2 / PORB (tarr – T*))wherewhere x = a sini/c is the projected semi-major axis in lt-sec x = a sini/c is the projected semi-major axis in lt-sec and T* is the ascending node time transit.and T* is the ascending node time transit.

Compute phase delays of the pulses ( -> folding pulse profiles) with respect to constant frequency.

Sum in quadrature statistical errors on pulse arrival time Sum in quadrature statistical errors on pulse arrival time delays to the errors due to errors on the orbital delays to the errors due to errors on the orbital parameters used.parameters used.

TheThe uncertanties uncertanties pos pos on the source position on the source position can not be taken can not be taken into account on the same way because are a systematic effect into account on the same way because are a systematic effect and will be discussed later.and will be discussed later.

Main trends in Pulse Arrival Time delays are due to:

1) Orbital parameters residuals (sinusoidal terms)2) spin frequency correction (linear term)3) spin frequency derivaties (quadratic and/or greater terms)4) Timing noise (e.g. fluctuations in the accretion flow)

Page 13: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Accretion Torque modelling Bolometric luminosity L is observed to vary with time during an outburst. Assume it to be a good tracer of dotM: L= (GM/R)dotM with 1, G gravitational constant, M and R neutron star mass and radius

Matter accretes through a Keplerian disk truncated at magnetospheric radius Rm dotM-. In standard disk accretion =2/7

Possible threading of the accretion disk by the pulsar magnetic field is modelled here as in Rappaport et al. (2004), which gives the total accretion torque: = I dot = dotM l – 2 / 9 Rco3

Matter transfers to the neutron star its specific angular momentum l = (GM Rm)1/2 at Rm, causing a torque = l dotM.

Page 14: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Accretion Torque Accretion Torque modelling modelling

where d(t)/dt must be derived by the accretion must be derived by the accretion theory theory

(e.g. exponentially decresing with time with the (e.g. exponentially decresing with time with the same decaying time of the X-ray flux).same decaying time of the X-ray flux).

t'

')dt''(t'νt

dt')T(tΔνφ=(t)φTT

v

00

00

Page 15: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

IGR J00291: the fastest accreting MSP

dot = 8.5(1.1) x 10-13 Hz/s 2/dof = 106/77

(Burderi et al. 2007, ApJ; Falanga et al. 2005, A&A)

Porb = 2.5 hs = 600 Hz

0 8

Page 16: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Spin-up in IGR J00291

IGR J00291+5934 shows a strong spin-up: dot0 = 1.2 x 10-12 Hz/s (at the beginning of the outburst, assuming a linear decay of the X-ray flux and hence of the spin-up rate), which indicates a mass accretion rate of dotM0 = 7 10-9 M yr-1.

Comparing the bolometric luminosity of the source as derived from the X-ray spectrum with the mass accretion rate of the source as derived from the timing, we find an agreement if we place the source at a quite large distance between 7 and 10 kpc.

In a good approximation the X-ray flux is observed to linearly decrease with time during the outburst:

dotM(t) = dotM0 [1-(t – T0)/TB], where TB = 8.4 days

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International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Timing of XTE J1751

Porb = 42 mins = 435 Hz

The X-ray flux of XTE J1751 decreases exponentially with time (TB = 7.2 days).

The best fit of the phase delays dot0 = 6.3 10-13 Hz/s and dotM0 = (3.4 – 8.7) 10-9 Msun/yr.

Comparing this with the X-ray flux from the source, we obtain a distance of 7-8.5 kpc (using the same arguments used for IGR J00291).

(Papitto et al. 2007, MNRAS)

Page 18: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Spin down in the case of XTE J0929-314

Spin down in XTE J0929, (almost) the slowest among accreting MSPs, during the only outburst of this source observed by RXTE.

Measured spin-down rate:

dot = -5.5 10-14 Hz/s

Estimated magnetic field: B = 5 x 108 Gauss

Porb = 44 mins = 185 Hz

(Galloway et al. 2002; Di Salvo et al. 2007,arXiv:0705.0464)

Page 19: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Spin down in the case of XTE J1814

Phase Delays ofThe Fundamental

Phase Delays ofThe First Harmonic

Papitto et al. 2007, MNRAS

Spin-down:dot = -6.7 10-14 Hz/s

Porb = 4 hrs = 310 Hz

Page 20: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Phase residuals anticorrelated to flux changes in XTE J1814-

338Modulations of the phase residuals, anticorrelated with the X-ray flux, and possibly caused by movements of the footpoints of the magnetic field lines in response to flux changesPost fit residuals of the Fundamental

Post fit residuals of the harmonic

Estimated magnetic field:B = 8 x 108 Gauss

Page 21: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

The Strange case of XTE J1807-294

The outburst of February 2003(Riggio et al. 2007 MNRAS, Riggio et al. 2008 ApJ)

Page 22: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

But… There is order beyond the chaos!

The key idea:Harmonic decomposition of the pulse profile

The source shows a weak spin-up at a rate of:

dot = 2.1 10-14 Hz/s.

In this case using dotM(t) decreasing exponentially with time gives an improvement of the fit with respect to a simple parabola (dotM = const).

Page 23: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Back to the fundamental

From the spin frequency derivative we can calculate the mass accretion rate to the NS, that is:

4 x 10-10 Msun/yr

Corresponding to a luminosity of 4.7 x 1036 ergs/cm2/s.

Comparing this to the observed X-ray flux of the source, we infer a distance to the source of about 4 kpc.

Page 24: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Positional Uncertainties of XTE J1807 (0.6’’)

Major source of error on the frequency derivative given by the uncertainty in the source position. From a scan of the chandra error box we find that the frequency derivative must be in the range: (1–3.5) 10-14 Hz/s

Page 25: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

SAX J1808: the outburst of 2002

Phase Delays ofThe Fundamental

Phase Delays ofThe First Harmonic

Spin-down at the end of the outburst:

dot = -7.6 10-14 Hz/s

(Burderi et al. 2006, ApJ Letters)

Porb = 2 h= 401 Hz

Spin-up:

dot = 4.4 10-13 Hz/s

Page 26: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

SAX J1808.4-3658: Pulse Profiles

Folded light curves obtained from the 2002 outburst, on Oct 20 (before the phase shift of the fundamental) and on Nov 1-2 (after the phase shift), respectively

Page 27: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

SAX J1808.4-3658: phase shift and X-ray flux

Phase shifts of the fundamental probably caused by a variation of the pulse shape in response to flux variations.

Page 28: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Discussion of the results for SAX J1808

Spin up: dot0 = 4.4 10-13 Hz/s corresponding to a mass accretion rate of dotM0 = 1.8 10-9 Msun/yr

Spin-down: dot0 = -7.6 10-14 Hz/s

(see Hartman et al. 2007 for a different interpretation)

In the case of SAX J1808 the distance of 3.5 kpc (Galloway & Cumming 2006) is known with good accuracy; in this case the mass accretion rate inferred from timing is barely consistent with the measured X-ray luminosity (the discrepancy is only about a factor 2), Using the formula of Rappaport et al. (2004) for the spin-down at the end of the outburst, interpreted as a threading of the accretion disc, we find: 2 / 9 Rc3 = 2 dotsd from where we evaluate the NS magnetic field: B = (3.5 +/- 0.5) 108 Gauss: (in agrement with previous results, B = 1-5 108

Gauss, Di Salvo & Burderi 2003)

Page 29: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

Orbital Solutions and Variation of the Periastron

Time Passagedot Porb = (3.42 +/- 0.05) 10–12 s/s

(Di Salvo et al. 2007; Hartman et al. 2007See next talk by Luciano Burderi)

Orbital cicles

Page 30: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Results for 6 of the 8 known LMXBs which show X-ray millisecond coherent

pulsations

Results for 6 of the 8 known LMXBs which show X-ray millisecond coherent

pulsationsResults for accreting millisecond pulsars (in order of increasing spin period. See Di Salvo et al. 2007 for a review):

IGR J00291+5934: Ps=1.7ms, Porb=2.5hr SPIN UP (Burderi et al. 2007)XTE J1751-306: Ps=2.3ms, Porb=42m SPIN UP (Papitto et al. 2007)

SAX J1748.9-2021: Ps=2.3ms, Porb=8.8hr ??? (Altamirano et al. 2007)SAX J1808.4-3658: Ps=2.5ms, Porb=2hr SPIN UP (& SPIN DOWN,

Burderi et al. 2006, but see also Hartman et al. 2007)

XTE J1814-338: Ps=3.2ms, Porb=4hr SPIN DOWN (Papitto et al. 2007)XTE J1807-294: Ps=5.2ms, Porb=40m SPIN UP (Riggio et al. 2007)XTE J0929-314: Ps=5.4ms, Porb=43.6m SPIN DOWN

(Galloway et al. 2002)

Results for accreting millisecond pulsars (in order of increasing spin period. See Di Salvo et al. 2007 for a review):

IGR J00291+5934: Ps=1.7ms, Porb=2.5hr SPIN UP (Burderi et al. 2007)XTE J1751-306: Ps=2.3ms, Porb=42m SPIN UP (Papitto et al. 2007)

SAX J1748.9-2021: Ps=2.3ms, Porb=8.8hr ??? (Altamirano et al. 2007)SAX J1808.4-3658: Ps=2.5ms, Porb=2hr SPIN UP (& SPIN DOWN,

Burderi et al. 2006, but see also Hartman et al. 2007)

XTE J1814-338: Ps=3.2ms, Porb=4hr SPIN DOWN (Papitto et al. 2007)XTE J1807-294: Ps=5.2ms, Porb=40m SPIN UP (Riggio et al. 2007)XTE J0929-314: Ps=5.4ms, Porb=43.6m SPIN DOWN

(Galloway et al. 2002)

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International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Thank you very much!

We conclude that spin-up dominates in sources with relatively high mass accretion rate (producing fast pulsars) and spin down dominates in sources with relatively strong magnetic field (producing slow pulsars).

See a review of these results in Di Salvo et al. 2007 (arXiv:0705.0464)

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Page 33: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Timing Technique • Correct time for orbital motion delays: t tarr – x sin 2/PORB (tarr –T*) where x = a sini/c is the projected

semimajor axis in light-s and T* is the time of ascending node passage.

• Compute phase delays of the pulses ( -> folding pulse profiles) with respect to constant frequency

• If a good orbital solution is available: small delays caused by orbital uncertainties, that average to zero over Porb << Tobs, propagated as further uncertainties on the phase delays.

• Main overall delays caused by spin period correction (linear term) and spin period derivative (quadratic term)

• Uncertainties on the source coordinates (producing a modulation of the phase delays over 1 yr) can be considered as systematic uncertainties on the linear and quadratic term

Page 34: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Accretion Torque modelling Bolometric luminosity L is observed to vary with time during an outburst. Assume it to be a good tracer of dotM: L= (GM/R)dotM with 1, G gravitational constant, M and R neutron star mass and radius

Matter accretes through a Keplerian disk truncated at magnetospheric radius Rm dotM-. In standard disk accretion =2/7

Possible threading of the accretion disk by the pulsar magnetic field is modelled here as in Rappaport et al. (2004, but see next talk by Burderi): = dotM l – 2 / 9 Rc3

Matter transfers to the neutron star its specific angular momentum l = (GM Rm)1/2 at Rm, causing a torque = l dotM.

Page 35: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Results for IGR J00291+5934

In a good approximation the X-ray flux is observed to linearly decrease with time during the outburst:

dotM(t) = dotM0 [1-(t – T0)/TB], where TB = 8.4 daysAssuming Rm dotM-. ( = 2/7 for standard accretion disks;

= 0 for a constant accretion radius equal to Rc; = 2 for a simple parabolic function), we calculate the expected phase delays vs. time: = - 0 – 0 (t-T0) – ½ dot0 (t – T0)2 [1 – (2-) (t-T0)/6TB]

Maesured dot–13= 11.7, gives a lower limit of dotM = (7+/-1) 10-9 Msun/yr, corresponding to Lbol = 7 x 1037 ergs/s

We have calculated a lower limit to the mass accretion rate (obtained for the case = 0 and no negative threading (m = 1.4, I45 = 1.29)

dotM = 5.9 10-10 dot–13 I45 m-2/3 Msun/yr

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International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Distance to IGR J00291+5934

The timing-based calculation of the bolometric luminosity is one order of magnitude higher than the X-ray luminosity determined by the X-ray flux and assuming a distance of 5 kpc !

The X-ray luminosity is not a good tracer of dotM, or the distance to the source is quite large (15 kpc, beyond the Galaxy edge in the direction of IGR J00291 !)

In this way we can reduce the discrepancy between the timing-determined mass accretion rate and observed X-ray flux by about a factor of 2, and we can put the source at a more reliable distance of 7.4 – 10.7 kpc

We argue that, since the pulse profile is very sinusoidal, probaly we just see only one of the two polar caps, and possibly we are missing part of the X-ray flux..

Page 37: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

The Strange case of XTE J1807

The outburst of February 2003(Riggio et al. 2007, submitted)

Page 38: Cool discs, hot flows The varying facesof accreting compact objects Timing of Accreting Millisecond Pulsars: a Review T. Di Salvo (1) L. Burderi (2), A

International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

The Strange case of XTE J1807

The outburst of February 2003(Riggio et al. 2007, submitted)

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Discussion of the results for SAX J1808

In a good approximation the X-ray flux is observed to decrease exponentially with time during the outburst:

dotM(t) = dotM0 exp[(t – T0)/TB], where TB = 9.3 daysderived from a fit of the first 14 days of the light curve.Assuming Rm dotM-. (with = 0 for a constant accretion radius equal to Rc), we calculate the expected phase delays vs. time:

= - 0 – (t-T0) – C exp[(t-T0)/TB] + ½ dot0 (t – T0)2

where B = 0 + C/TB and C = 1.067 10-4 I45-1 P-3

1/3 m2/3 TB2

dotM-10 (the last term takes into account a possible spin-down term at the end of the outburst).We find that the best fit is constituted by a spin up at the beginning of the outburst plus a (barely significant) spin down term at the end of the outburst.

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International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

XTE J0929-314: the most puzzling AMSP

The mass accretion rate is varying with time, while instead the phase delays clearly indicate a constant (or at most decreasing) spin-down rate of the source. We therefore assume

spin-up << -spin-down = 5.5 x 10-14 Hz /s

Assuming that the spin-up is at least a factor of 5 less than the spin-down, we find a mass accretion rate at the beginning of the outburst of dotM < 6 x 10-11 Msun/yr, which would correspond to the quite low X-ray luminosity of Lbol < 6 x 1035 ergs/s.

Comparing this with the X-ray flux of the source we find an upper limit to the source distance of about 1.2 kpc (too small !!)

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Conclusions: Spin-up IGR J00291+5934 shows a strong spin-up: dot = 1.2 10-12 Hz/s, which indicates a mass accretion rate of dotM = 7 10-9 M yr-1. Comparing the bolometric luminosity of the source as derived from the X-ray spectrum with the mass accretion rate of the source as derived from the timing, we find a good agreement if we place the source at a quite large distance between 7 and 10 kpc.

XTE J1807-294 shows a noisy fundamental and a clear spin-up in the second harmonic: dot = 2.1 10-14 Hz/s.

SAX J1808.4-3658 shows a noisy fundamental and a clear spin-up in the second harmonic: dot = 4.4 10-13 Hz/s.

The spin up switches off at the end of the outburst, as expected for a substantial decrease of the accretion rate.

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Conclusions: Spin-down XTE J1814-338 shows noisy fundamental and harmonic phase delays, and a strong spin-down: dot = -6.7 10-14 Hz/s, which indicates a quite large magnetic field of B = 8 108 Gauss.

XTE J0929-314 shows a clear spin-down of dot = -5.5 10-14 Hz/s, which indicates a magnetic field of B = 4-5 108 Gauss.

Imposing that the spin-up contribution due to the mass accretion is negligible, we find however that the source is at the very close distance of about 1 kpc. Independent measures of the distance to this source will give important information on the torque acting on the NS and its response.

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Another Strange case: XTE J1807

The outburst of February 2003(Riggio et al. 2007, in preparation)

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International Conference on Astrophysics of Compact objects

Spin Frequencies of AMSPs

From Wijnands(2005)

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But… There is order beyond the chaos!

The key idea:Harmonic decomposition of the pulse profile

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Pulsars spin up

The accreting matter transfers its specific angular momentum (the Keplerian AM at the accretion radius) to the neutron star:

L=(GMRacc)1/2

The process goes on until the pulsar reaches the keplerian velocity at Racc (equilibrium period); Pmin when Racc = Rns

The conservation of AM tells us how much mass is necessary to reach Pmin starting from a non-rotating NS. Simulations give ~0.3Msun (e.g. Lavagetto et al. 2004)