Detection and Evolution of Linear Polarization of the Galactic Center Transient MAXI J1744-294
Abstract
MAXI J1744-294, likely a low-mass X-ray binary system, is a Galactic-center transient source, detected at radio and X-ray wavelengths, located approximately 19'' southeast of Sgr A*. We report the first detection of its variable linear polarization in four epochs spanning 2025 Apr 04--09. The normalized 33 and 43 GHz Stokes parameters q and u over the four epochs imply a common Faraday rotation screen with a rotation measure RM =-63\,606+844-861 radians m-2, the third largest RM detected within the Galaxy. The RM is consistent with that of the Galactic center magnetar PSR J1745-2900, giving the first direct evidence that MAXI J1744 lies within the Galactic center region, is bound to Sgr A*, and therefore, is part of the nuclear star cluster. The uniformity in the Galactic center Faraday screen suggests that Sgr A*'s ≈-105 rad m-2 RM is intrinsic rather than originating from an unrelated line-of-sight source. On 2025 Apr 06, we detected a secondary polarized component with an additional RM ≈-6000 rad m-2, which was not seen at any other epoch. Assuming this secondary component primarily cools by synchrotron radiation, the implied local magnetic field strength is 15--30 gauss. In the context of a jetted X-ray binary progenitor, the additional RM screen and magnetic field strength are explainable with a short-lived knot in a putative jet.
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