Discovery of the Galactic High-Mass Gamma-ray Binary 4FGL J1405.1-6119
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Author/Creator ORCID
Date
2019-08-28
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Citation of Original Publication
Corbet, R.H.D., Chomiuk, L., Coe, M.J., Coley, J.B., Dubus, G., Edwards, P.G., Martin, P., McBride, V.A., Stevens, J., Strader, J., and Townsend, L.J, Discovery of the Galactic High-mass Gamma-Ray Binary 4FGL J1405.1-6119, 2019, https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2019ApJ...884...93C
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Abstract
We report the identification from multi-wavelength observations of the Fermi Large Area Telescope
(LAT) source 4FGL J1405.1-6119 (= 3FGL J1405.4-6119) as a high-mass gamma-ray binary. Observations with the LAT show that gamma-ray emission from the system is modulated at a period of
13.7135 ± 0.0019 days, with the presence of two maxima per orbit with different spectral properties.
X-ray observations using the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory X-ray Telescope (XRT) show that X-ray
emission is also modulated at this period, but with a single maximum that is closer to the secondary
lower-energy gamma-ray maximum. A radio source, coincident with the X-ray source is also found
from Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) observations, and the radio emission is modulated
on the gamma-ray period with similar phasing to the X-ray emission. A large degree of interstellar
obscuration severely hampers optical observations, but a near-infrared counterpart is found. Nearinfrared spectroscopy indicates an O6 III spectral classification. This is the third gamma-ray binary
to be discovered with the Fermi LAT from periodic modulation of the gamma-ray emission, the other
two sources also have early O star, rather than Be star, counterparts. We consider at what distances
we can detect such modulated gamma-ray emission with the LAT, and examine constraints on the
gamma-ray binary population of the Milky Way.