We present the orbital solution for the newly discovered transient Be X-ray binary Swift J0243.6+6124 based on the data from the gamma-ray burst monitor on board Fermi obtained during the October ...2017 outburst. We model the Doppler induced and intrinsic spin variations of the neutron star assuming that the latter is driven by accretion torque, and we discuss the implications of the observed spin variations for the parameters of the neutron star and the binary. In particular, we conclude that the neutron star must be strongly magnetized, and estimate the distance to the source at ~5 kpc.
We present here the first convincing observational manifestation of a magnetar-like magnetic field in an accreting neutron star in binary system – the first pulsating ultraluminous X-ray source X−2 ...in the galaxy M82. Using the Chandra X-ray observatory data, we show that the source exhibit the bimodal distribution of the luminosity with two well-defined peaks separated by a factor of 40. This behaviour can be interpreted as the action of the ‘propeller regime’ of accretion. The onset of the propeller in a 1.37 s pulsar at luminosity of ∼1040 erg s−1 implies the dipole component of the neutron star magnetic field of ∼1014 G.
We study properties of luminous X-ray pulsars using a simplified model of the accretion column. The maximal possible luminosity is calculated as a function of the neutron star (NS) magnetic field and ...spin period. It is shown that the luminosity can reach values of the order of 1040 erg s−1 for the magnetar-like magnetic field (B ≳ 1014 G) and long spin periods (P ≳ 1.5 s). The relative narrowness of an area of feasible NS parameters which are able to provide higher luminosities leads to the conclusion that L ≃ 1040 erg s−1 is a good estimate for the limiting accretion luminosity of an NS. Because this luminosity coincides with the cut-off observed in the high-mass X-ray binaries luminosity function which otherwise does not show any features at lower luminosities, we can conclude that a substantial part of ultraluminous X-ray sources are accreting neutron stars in binary systems.
Abstract
Magnetized neutron stars power at least some ultraluminous X-ray sources. The accretion flow in these cases is interrupted at the magnetospheric radius and then reaches the surface of a ...neutron star following magnetic field lines. Accreting matter moving along magnetic field lines forms the accretion envelope around the central object. We show that in case of high-mass accretion rates ≳ 1019 g s−1 the envelope becomes closed and optically thick, which influences the dynamics of the accretion flow and the observational manifestation of the neutron star hidden behind the envelope. Particularly, the optically thick accretion envelope results in a multi-colour blackbody spectrum originating from the magnetospheric surface. The spectrum and photon energy flux vary with the viewing angle, which gives rise to pulsations characterized by high pulsed fraction and typically smooth pulse profiles. The reprocessing of radiation due to interaction with the envelope leads to the disappearance of cyclotron scattering features from the spectrum. We speculate that the super-orbital variability of ultraluminous X-ray sources powered by accreting neutron stars can be attributed to precession of the neutron star due to interaction of magnetic dipole with the accretion disc.
The accretion flow around X-ray pulsars with a strong magnetic field is funnelled by the field to relatively small regions close to the magnetic poles of the neutron star (NS), the hotspots. During ...strong outbursts regularly observed from some X-ray pulsars, the X-ray luminosity can be so high that the emerging radiation is able to stop the accreting matter above the surface via radiation-dominated shock, and the accretion column begins to rise. This border luminosity is usually called the ‘critical luminosity’. Here we calculate the critical luminosity as a function of the NS magnetic field strength B using the exact Compton scattering cross-section in a strong magnetic field. Influence of the resonant scattering and photon polarization is taken into account for the first time. We show that the critical luminosity is not a monotonic function of the B-field. It reaches a minimum of a few 1036 erg s−1 when the cyclotron energy is about 10 keV and a considerable amount of photons from a hotspot have energy close to the cyclotron resonance. For small B, this luminosity is about 1037 erg s−1, nearly independent of the parameters. It grows for the B-field in excess of 1012 G because of the drop in the effective cross-section of interaction below the cyclotron energy. We investigate how different types of the accretion flow and geometries of the accretion channel affect the results and demonstrate that the general behaviour of the critical luminosity on the B-field is very robust. The obtained results are shown to be in good agreement with the available observational data and provide a necessary ground for the interpretation of upcoming high-quality data from the currently operating and planned X-ray telescopes.
ABSTRACT
Recently, it has been discovered that the transition of X-ray pulsars to the low luminosity state ($L\lesssim 10^{35}\, {\rm erg\ \rm s^{-1}}$) is accompanied by a dramatic spectral change. ...That is, the typical power-law-like spectrum with high-energy cut-off transforms into a two-component structure with a possible cyclotron absorption feature on top of it. It was proposed that these spectral characteristics can be explained qualitatively by the emission of cyclotron photons in the atmosphere of the neutron star caused by collisional excitation of electrons to upper Landau levels and further Comptonization of the photons by electron gas. The electron gas are expected to be overheated in a thin top layer of the atmosphere. In this paper, we perform Monte Carlo simulations of the radiative transfer in the atmosphere of an accreting neutron star while accounting for a resonant scattering of polarized X-ray photons by thermally distributed electrons. The spectral shape is shown to be strongly polarization-dependent in soft X-rays ($\lesssim 10\, {\rm keV}$) and near the cyclotron scattering feature. The results of our numerical simulations are tested against the observational data of the X-ray pulsar A 0535+262 in the low-luminosity state. We show that the spectral shape of the pulsar can be reproduced by the proposed theoretical model. We discuss applications of the discovery to the observational studies of accreting neutron stars.
The study was designed to create a primary cell culture of uveal melanoma and to evaluate its resistance to chemotherapy. Of the obtained 20 samples of uveal melanoma, the primary cultures with ...proliferation sufficient for MTT test were derived in only 7 cases. However, even these cultures were unable to survive more than 4 passages; the cells accumulated melanin and underwent apoptosis. Retinol palmitate and nepafenac produced no cytotoxic effect on uveal melanoma cells. Of 5 cultures treated with sodium valproate (Convulex), no pronounced cytotoxic effect was observed in one culture (UM4); in 2 cultures, 50% cells died in the presence of the lowest drug concentration of 1.88 mg/ml; and in 2 cultures, the same effect was achieved at drug concentrations 7-10 mg/ml. The cytotoxic effect of treosulfan was evaluated in only 4 cultures of uveal melanoma: the drug exhibited pronounced antitumor activity on all cultures, in 2 cases, it was effective at a concentration of 0.16 mg/ml. Gemcitabine in a concentration of 2.5 mg/ml produced a pronounced cytotoxic effect in 4 out of 7 cultures (death of 70-80% cells) and induced death of ~45% cells in the remaining 3 cultures. Mitoxantrone had ambiguous effect: in 2 of 5 cultures, the drug in high concentrations stimulated the growth of tumor cells, but in 3 cultures, the drug even in minimum concentrations induced death of 70-80% cells.
Abstract We report on the monitoring of the final stage of the outburst from the first Galactic ultraluminous X-ray pulsar Swift J0243.6+6124, which reached ∼40 Eddington luminosities. The main aim ...of the monitoring program with the Swift/XRT telescope was to measure the magnetic field of the neutron star using the luminosity of transition to the ‘propeller’ state. The visibility constraints, unfortunately, did not permit us to observe the source down to the fluxes low enough to detect such a transition. The tight upper limit on the propeller luminosity Lprop < 6.8 × 1035 erg s−1 implies the dipole component of the magnetic field B < 1013 G. On the other hand, the observed evolution of the pulse profile and of the pulsed fraction with flux points to a change of the emission region geometry at the critical luminosity Lcrit ∼ 3 × 1038 erg s−1 both in the rising and declining parts of the outburst. We associate the observed change with the onset of the accretion column, which allows us to get an independent estimate of the magnetic field strength close to the neutron stars surface of B > 1013 G. Given the existing uncertainty in the effective magnetosphere size, we conclude that both estimates are marginally compatible with each other.