The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

Discovery of a Second Eclipsing, ​​​​​Bursting Neutron Star Low-mass X-Ray Binary in the Globular Cluster Terzan 6

  • Maureen van den Berg,
  • Jeroen Homan,
  • Craig O. Heinke,
  • David A. Pooley,
  • Rudy Wijnands,
  • Arash Bahramian,
  • James C. A. Miller-Jones

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad2f3d
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 966, no. 2
p. 217

Abstract

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We have analyzed Chandra and Suzaku observations of the globular cluster Terzan 6, made when the recurrent transient GRS 1747–312 was in quiescence. Our analysis reveals the presence of a second eclipsing, bursting neutron star low-mass X-ray binary in the central regions of the cluster, in addition to GRS 1747–312. The new source, which we name Terzan 6 X2, is located only ∼0.″7 away from GRS 1747–312 in the 2021 Chandra images. The detection of a 5.14 ks long eclipse in the light curve of X2 at a time not predicted by the ephemeris of GRS 1747–312 confirms that it is an unrelated source. Using the Suzaku light curve from 2009, which, in addition to a type I X-ray burst, also showed an eclipse-like feature, we constrain the orbital period to be longer than 16.27 hr. The 0.5–10 keV luminosities of X2 vary in the range of ∼0.24–5.9 × 10 ^34 erg s ^−1 on timescales of months to years. We have identified a plausible optical counterpart of X2 in Hubble Space Telescope F606W and F814W images. This star varied by 2.7 mag in V _606 between epochs separated by years. In the cluster color–magnitude diagram, the variable counterpart lies in the blue-straggler region when it was optically bright, about 1.1–1.7 mag above the main-sequence turn-off. From the orbital period–density relation of Roche-lobe filling stars, we find the mass-donor radius to be ≳0.8 R _⊙ .

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