A Brown Dwarf Companion for the Accreting Millisecond Pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658
Abstract
BeppoSAX has revealed a population of faint neutron star X-ray transients in the Galactic bulge. King conjectured that these neutron stars are accreting from brown dwarfs (BD) with a time-averaged mass transfer rate < M>≈ 10-11 Msun/year. We show that the orbital parameters of the 401 Hz accreting millisecond pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658 support this hypothesis. A main-sequence mass donor requires a nearly face-on inclination and a higher < M> than observed. However, the range of allowed inclinations is substantially relaxed and the predicted mass transfer rate is consistent with that observed if a hot 0.05 Msun BD is the donor. We then explain the BD radius required (0.13 R) to fill the Roche lobe. All transiently accreting neutron stars have a minimum luminosity in quiescence set by the time-averaged mass transfer rate onto the neutron star. We show that the constant heating of the BD by this emission can maintain the higher entropy implied by a 0.13 R radius. Our work bolsters the case that SAX J1808.4-3658 is a progenitor to compact ms radio pulsar binaries (e.g. like those found in 47 Tuc). The very low < M>'s implies that the progenitors to these radio pulsars are long-lived (Gyrs) transient systems, rather than short-lived (Myrs) Eddington-limited accretors. Hence, the accreting progenitor population to millisecond radio pulsars in 47 Tuc could still be present and found in quiescence with Chandra.(abridged)
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