4.7 Article

Pulsating in Unison at Optical and X-Ray Energies: Simultaneous High Time Resolution Observations of the Transitional Millisecond Pulsar PSR J1023+0038

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 882, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ab2fdf

Keywords

accretion, accretion disks; pulsars: individual (PSR J1023+0038); stars: neutron; X-rays: binaries

Funding

  1. ESA member states
  2. NASA
  3. University of Florida
  4. National Science Foundation [AST-0352664]
  5. IUCAA
  6. EU [660657-TMSP-H2020-MSCA-IF-2014]
  7. Italian Space Agency
  8. National Institute for Astrophysics, ASI/INAF [ASI-INAF I/037/12/0, 2017-14-H.0]
  9. iPeska research grant under the PRIN-INAF SKA/CTA [70/2016]
  10. Towards SKA/CTA era research grant under the PRIN-INAF SKA/CTA [70/2016]
  11. International Space Science Institute (ISSI-Beijing)
  12. Cost Action PHAROS [CA16214]
  13. ERC [817661]
  14. Spanish Grant [PGC2018-095512-B-I00]
  15. Catalan grant [SGR2017-1383]
  16. COST Action PHAROS [CA 16124]
  17. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation [14.W03.31.0021]
  18. University of Florida Research Foundation Professorship
  19. University of Florida Graduate Student Fellowship
  20. H2020 Hemera program [730970]

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PSR J1023+0038 is the first millisecond pulsar discovered to pulsate in the visible band; such a detection took place when the pulsar was surrounded by an accretion disk and also showed X-ray pulsations. We report on the first high time resolution observational campaign of this transitional pulsar in the disk state, using simultaneous observations in the optical (Telescopio Nazionale Galileo, Nordic Optical Telescope, Telescopi Joan Oro), X-ray (XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, NICER), infrared (Gran Telescopio Canarias), and UV (Swift) bands. Optical and X-ray pulsations were detected simultaneously in the X-ray high-intensity mode in which the source spends similar to 70% of the time, and both disappeared in the low mode, indicating a common underlying physical mechanism. In addition, optical and X-ray pulses were emitted within a few kilometers and had similar pulse shapes and distributions of the pulsed flux density compatible with a power-law relation F-nu proportional to nu(-0.7) connecting the optical and the 0.3-45 keV X-ray band. Optical pulses were also detected during flares with a pulsed flux reduced by one-third with respect to the high mode; the lack of a simultaneous detection of X-ray pulses is compatible with the lower photon statistics. We show that magnetically channeled accretion of plasma onto the surface of the neutron star cannot account for the optical pulsed luminosity (similar to 10(31) erg s(-1)). On the other hand, magnetospheric rotation-powered pulsar emission would require an extremely efficient conversion of spin-down power into pulsed optical and X-ray emission. We then propose that optical and X-ray pulses are instead produced by synchrotron emission from the intrabinary shock that forms where a striped pulsar wind meets the accretion disk, within a few light cylinder radii away, similar to 100 km, from the pulsar.

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