2PBC J0658.0-1746: a hard X-ray eclipsing polar in the orbital period gap
Abstract
The hard X-ray source 2PBC J0658.0-1746 was proposed as an eclipsing magnetic cataclysmic variable of the polar type, based on optical follow-ups. We present the first spectral and timing analysis at X-ray energies with XMM-Newton, complemented with archival X-ray, optical, IR photometry and spectroscopy. The X-ray emission shows bright and faint phases and total eclipses recurring every 2.38 h, consistent with optical properties. This firmly identifies 2PBC J0658.0-1746 as an eclipsing polar, the second hard X-ray selected in the orbital period gap. The X-ray orbital modulation changes from cycle-to-cycle and the X-ray flux is strongly variable over the years, implying a non-stationary mass accretion rate both on short and long timescales. The X-ray eclipses allow to refine the orbital ephemeris with period 0.09913398(4) d, and to constrain the binary inclination 79\,o i 90\,o and the mass ratio 0.18 <M2/MWD<0.40. A companion mass M2=0.2-0.25\,M with a radius R2=0.24-0.26\,R and spectral type 4, at D=209+3-2\,pc, is derived. A lower limit to the white dwarf mass of 0.6\,\,M is obtained from the X-ray spectrum. An upper limit to the magnetic colatitude, β 50\,o, and a shift in azimuth, 14\,o, of the main accreting pole are also estimated. The optical/IR spectral energy distribution shows large excess in the mid-IR due to lower harmonics of cyclotron emission. A high-state mass accretion rate \,0.4-1×10-10\,M\,yr-1, lower than that of cataclysmic variables above the gap and close to that of systems below it, is estimated. With 2PBC J0658.0-1746, the number of hard X-ray selected polars increases to thirteen members, suggesting that they are not as rare as previously believed.
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