The superslow pulsation X-ray pulsars in high mass X-ray binaries
Abstract
There exists a special class of X-ray pulsars that exhibit very slow pulsation of P spin>1000 s in the high mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs). We have studied the temporal and spectral properties of these superslow pulsation neutron star binaries in hard X-ray bands with INTEGRAL observations. Long-term monitoring observations find spin period evolution of two sources: spin-down trend for 4U 2206+54 (P spin 5560 s with P spin 4.9× 10-7 s s-1) and long-term spin-up trend for 2S 0114+65 (P spin 9600 s with P spin -1× 10-6 s s-1) in the last 20 years. A Be X-ray transient, SXP 1062 (P spin 1062 s), also showed a fast spin-down rate of P spin 3× 10-6 s s-1 during an outburst. These superslow pulsation neutron stars cannot be produced in the standard X-ray binary evolution model unless the neutron star has a much stronger surface magnetic field (B>1014 G). The physical origin of the superslow spin period is still unclear. The possible origin and evolution channels of the superslow pulsation X-ray pulsars are discussed. Superslow pulsation X-ray pulsars could be younger X-ray binary systems, still in the fast evolution phase preceding the final equilibrium state. Alternatively, they could be a new class of neutron star system - accreting magnetars.
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