The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Jan 2023)

Timing Analysis of the 2022 Outburst of the Accreting Millisecond X-Ray Pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658: Hints of an Orbital Shrinking

  • Giulia Illiano,
  • Alessandro Papitto,
  • Andrea Sanna,
  • Peter Bult,
  • Filippo Ambrosino,
  • Arianna Miraval Zanon,
  • Francesco Coti Zelati,
  • Luigi Stella,
  • Diego Altamirano,
  • Maria Cristina Baglio,
  • Enrico Bozzo,
  • Luciano Burderi,
  • Domitilla de Martino,
  • Alessandro Di Marco,
  • Tiziana di Salvo,
  • Carlo Ferrigno,
  • Vladislav Loktev,
  • Alessio Marino,
  • Mason Ng,
  • Maura Pilia,
  • Juri Poutanen,
  • Tuomo Salmi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/acad81
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 942, no. 2
p. L40

Abstract

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We present a pulse timing analysis of NICER observations of the accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar SAX J1808.4−3658 during the outburst that started on 2022 August 19. Similar to previous outbursts, after decaying from a peak luminosity of ≃1 × 10 ^36 erg s ^−1 in about a week, the pulsar entered a ∼1 month long reflaring stage. Comparison of the average pulsar spin frequency during the outburst with those previously measured confirmed the long-term spin derivative of ${\dot{\nu }}_{\mathrm{SD}}=-(1.15\,\pm \,0.06)\times \,{10}^{-15}$ Hz s ^−1 , compatible with the spin-down torque of a ≈10 ^26 G cm ^3 rotating magnetic dipole. For the first time in the last twenty years, the orbital phase evolution shows evidence for a decrease of the orbital period. The long-term behavior of the orbit is dominated by an ∼11 s modulation of the orbital phase epoch consistent with a ∼21 yr period. We discuss the observed evolution in terms of a coupling between the orbit and variations in the mass quadrupole of the companion star.

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