XMM-Newton observations of PSR J0554+3107: pulsing thermal emission from a cooling high-mass neutron star

Abstract

XMM-Newton observations of the middle-aged radio-quiet γ-ray pulsar J0554+3107 allowed us, for the first time, firmly identify it in X-rays by detection of pulsations with the pulsar period. In the 0.2-2 keV band, the pulse profile shows two peaks separated by about a half of the rotation phase with the pulsed fraction of 25 6 per cent. The profile and spectrum in this band can be mainly described by thermal emission from the neutron star with the hydrogen atmosphere, dipole magnetic field of 1013 G and non-uniform surface temperature. Non-thermal emission from the pulsar magnetosphere is marginally detected at higher photon energies. The spectral fit with the atmosphere+power law model implies that J0554+3107 is a rather heavy and cool neutron star with the mass of 1.6-2.1 M, the radius of ≈ 13 km and the redshifted effective temperature of ≈ 50 eV. The spectrum shows an absorption line of unknown nature at ≈ 350 eV. Given the extinction-distance relation, the pulsar is located at ≈ 2 kpc and has the redshifted bolometric thermal luminosity of ≈ 2 × 1032 erg s-1. We discuss cooling scenarios for J0554+3107 considering plausible equations of state of super-dense matter inside the star, different compositions of the heat-blanketing envelope and various ages.

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