An XMM-Newton and NuSTAR Study of IGR J18214-1318: A Non-pulsating High-mass X-Ray Binary with a Neutron Star

Date

2017-05-22

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Fornasini, Francesca M., John A. Tomsick, Matteo Bachetti, Roman A. Krivonos, Felix Fürst, Lorenzo Natalucci, Katja Pottschmidt, and Jörn Wilms. “An XMM-Newton and NuSTAR Study of IGR J18214-1318: A Non-Pulsating High-Mass X-Ray Binary with a Neutron Star.” The Astrophysical Journal 841, no. 1 (May 2017): 35. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa6ff4.

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Subjects

Abstract

IGR J18214-1318, a Galactic source discovered by the International Gamma-Ray Astrophysics Laboratory, is a high-mass X-ray binary (HMXB) with a supergiant O-type stellar donor. We report on the XMM-Newton and NuSTAR observations that were undertaken to determine the nature of the compact object in this system. This source exhibits high levels of aperiodic variability, but no periodic pulsations are detected with a 90% confidence upper limit of 2% fractional rms between 0.00003–88 Hz, a frequency range that includes the typical pulse periods of neutron stars (NSs) in HMXBs (0.1–10³ s). Although the lack of pulsations prevents us from definitively identifying the compact object in IGR J18214-1318, the presence of an exponential cutoff with e-folding energy ≤ 30keV in its 0.3–79 keV spectrum strongly suggests that the compact object is an NS. The X-ray spectrum also shows a Fe Kα emission line and a soft excess, which can be accounted for by either a partial-covering absorber with NH ≈ 10²³ cm⁻², which could be due to the inhomogeneous supergiant wind, or a blackbody component with kT = 1.74⁺⁰.⁰⁴₋₀.₀₅ keV and RBB ≈ 0.3 km, which may originate from NS hot spots. Although neither explanation for the soft excess can be excluded, the former is more consistent with the properties observed in other supergiant HMXBs. We compare IGR J18214-1318 to other HMXBs that lack pulsations or have long pulsation periods beyond the range covered by our observations.