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INTEGRAL detects millisecond pulsar IGR J18245-2452

INTEGRAL detects millisecond pulsar IGR J18245-2452


Date: 25 September 2013
Satellite: INTEGRAL
Depicts: IBIS/ISGRI X-ray detection of millisecond pulsar IGR J18245-2452
Copyright: ESA/INTEGRAL/IBIS/Jörn Wilms

This image shows two images of the same portion of the sky, taken at hard X-ray wavelengths the wide-field IBIS/ISGRI imager on board ESA's INTEGRAL mission. The image shown in the upper panel is based on data gathered on 18 February 2013, whereas the one shown in the lower panel is based on data gathered from 28 March and 6 April 2013.

In the later image, the source IGR J18245-2452 is visible (highlighted with a blue label), whereas it is not in the earlier image. Astronomers detected IGR J18245-2452 during a transient outburst of X-rays and identified it as a millisecond pulsar in a binary system. The X-ray outburst activity is caused by the pulsar as it accretes mass from its companion star. This millisecond pulsar is located in the globular cluster M28, which is part of the Galactic Bulge, at a distance of about 18 000 light-years from Earth.

Using data from other telescopes, including ESA's XMM-Newton X-ray Observatory and several radio telescopes, astronomers revealed that IGR J18245-2452 is in a crucial transitional phase. Millisecond pulsars spin much faster than expected for their old age, and astronomers believe their rotation receives a boost as they accrete matter in a binary system. The newly found pulsar swings back and forth between accretion-powered X-ray emission and rotation-driven radio emission, bringing conclusive evidence for this 'recycling' scenario.

The other sources visible in these two images are binary neutron stars and other X-ray sources. Some are present in both images, while others are present only in either of the two, highlighting the intense variability of the sky – and particularly of the Galactic Bulge – when viewed in X-rays.

Last Update: 1 September 2019
19-Mar-2024 07:30 UT

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