A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Discovery of a strong rotation of the X-ray polarization angle in the galactic burster GX 13+1
Authors: Bobrikova, Anna; Forsblom, Sofia V.; Di Marco, Alessandro; La Monaca, Fabio; Poutanen, Juri; Ng, Mason; Ravi, Swati; Loktev, Vladislav; Kajava, Jari J. E.; Ursini, Francesco; Veledina, Alexandra; Rogantini, Daniele; Salmi, Tuomo; Bianchi, Stefano; Capitanio, Fiamma; Done, Chris; Fabiani, Sergio; Gnarini, Andrea; Heyl, Jeremy; Kaaret, Philip; Matt, Giorgio; Muleri, Fabio; Nitindala, Anagha P.; Rankin, John; Weisskopf, Martin C.; Agudo, Iván; Antonelli, Lucio A.; Bachetti, Matteo; Baldini, Luca; Baumgartner, Wayne H.; Bellazzini, Ronaldo; Bongiorno, Stephen D.; Bonino, Raffaella; Brez, Alessandro; Bucciantini, Niccolò; Castellano, Simone; Cavazzuti, Elisabetta; Chen, Chien-Ting; Ciprini, Stefano; Costa, Enrico; De Rosa, Alessandra; Del Monte, Ettore; Di Gesu, Laura; Di Lalla, Niccolò; Donnarumma, Immacolata; Doroshenko, Victor; Dovčiak, Michal; Ehlert, Steven R.; Enoto, Teruaki; Evangelista, Yuri; Ferrazzoli, Riccardo; García, Javier A.; Gunji, Shuichi; Hayashida, Kiyoshi; Iwakiri, Wataru; Jorstad, Svetlana G.; Karas, Vladimir; Kislat, Fabian; Kitaguchi, Takao; Kolodziejczak, Jeffery J.; Krawczynski, Henric; Latronico, Luca; Liodakis, Ioannis; Maldera, Simone; Manfreda, Alberto; Marin, Frédéric; Marinucci, Andrea; Marscher, Alan P.; Marshall, Herman L.; Massaro, Francesco; Mitsuishi, Ikuyuki; Mizuno, Tsunefumi; Negro, Michela; Ng, Chi-Yung; O’Dell, Stephen L.; Omodei, Nicola; Oppedisano, Chiara; Papitto, Alessandro; Pavlov, George G.; Peirson, Abel L.; Perri, Matteo; Pesce-Rollins, Melissa; Petrucci, Pierre-Olivier; Pilia, Maura; Possenti, Andrea; Puccetti, Simonetta; Ramsey, Brian D.; Ratheesh, Ajay; Roberts, Oliver J.; Romani, Roger W.; Sgrò, Carmelo; Slane, Patrick; Soffitta, Paolo; Spandre, Gloria; Swartz, Douglas A.; Tamagawa, Toru; Tavecchio, Fabrizio; Taverna, Roberto; Tawara, Yuzuru; Tennant, Allyn F.; Thomas, Nicholas E.; Tombesi, Francesco; Trois, Alessio; Tsygankov, Sergey S.; Turolla, Roberto; Vink, Jacco; Wu, Kinwah; Xie, Fei; Zane, Silvia
Publisher: EDP Sciences
Publication year: 2024
Journal: Astronomy and Astrophysics
Journal name in source: Astronomy & Astrophysics
Article number: A170
Volume: 688
ISSN: 0004-6361
eISSN: 1432-0746
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202449318
Web address : http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202449318
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/457599501
Preprint address: https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.13058
Weakly magnetized neutron stars in X-ray binaries show a complex phenomenology with several spectral components that can be associated with the accretion disk, the boundary, and/or a spreading layer, a corona, and a wind. Spectroscopic information alone, however, is not enough to distinguish these components. The analysis of the timing data revealed that most of the variability, and in particular, kilohertz quasi-period oscillations, are associated with the high-energy component that corresponds to the boundary and/or spreading layer. Additional information about the nature of the spectral components, and in particular, about the geometry of the emission region, can be provided by X-ray polarimetry. One of the objects of the class, a bright, persistent, and rather peculiar galactic Type I X-ray burster GX 13+1, was observed with the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) and the XMM-Newton. Using the XMM-Newton data, we obtained the best-fit values for the continuum spectral parameters and detected strong absorption lines associated with the accretion disk wind. IXPE data showed the source to be significantly polarized in the 2-8 keV energy band, with an overall polarization degree (PD) of 1.4%±0.3% at a polarization angle (PA) of −2° ±6° (errors at the 68% confidence level). During the two-day long observation, we detected rotation of the PA by about 70° with the corresponding changes in the PD from 2% to nondetectable and then up to 5%. These variations in polarization properties are not accompanied by visible spectral state changes of the source. The energy-resolved polarimetric analysis showed a significant change in polarization, from being strongly dependent on energy at the beginning of the observation to being almost constant with energy in the later parts of the observation. As a possible interpretation, we suggest a constant polarization component, strong wind scattering, or a different polarization of the two main spectral components with an individually peculiar behavior. The rotation of the PA suggests a misalignment of the neutron star spin from the orbital axis.
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Funding information in the publication:
The US contribution is supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and led and managed by its Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), with industry partner Ball Aerospace (contract NNM15AA18C). The Italian contribution is supported by the Italian Space Agency (Agenzia Spaziale Italiana, ASI) through contract ASI-OHBI-2022-13-I.0, agreements ASI-INAF-2022-19-HH.0 and ASI-INFN-2017.13-H0, and its Space Science Data Center (SSDC) with agreements ASI-INAF-2022-14-HH.0 and ASI-INFN 2021-43-HH.0, and by the Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica (INAF) and the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN) in Italy. This research used data products provided by the IXPE Team (MSFC, SSDC, INAF, and INFN) and distributed with additional software tools by the High-Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center (HEASARC), at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC). We thank the XMM–Newton Project Scientist for approving our DDT request to observe GX 13+1. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Programme under the AHEAD2020 project (grant agreement 871158). This research has been supported by the Academy of Finland grants 333112, 349144, and 355672 (AB, SVF, JP, VL, AV, APN, SST) and the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) travel grant 57525212 (VD). ADM, FLM, SF, FMu, ECo, RF, and PSo are partially supported by MAECI with grant CN24GR08 “GRBAXP: Guangxi-Rome Bilateral Agreement for X-ray Polarimetry in Astrophysics”. This research was also supported by the INAF grant 1.05.23.05.06: “Spin and Geometry in accreting X-ray binaries: The first multifrequency spectro-polarimetric campaign”. IL was supported by the NASA Postdoctoral Program at the Marshall Space Flight Center, administered by Oak Ridge Associated Universities under contract with NASA.