4.7 Article

Helium-rich thermonuclear bursts and the distance to the accretion-powered millisecond pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 652, Issue 1, Pages 559-568

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/507598

Keywords

pulsars : individual (SAX J1808.4-3658); stars : distances; stars : neutron; X-rays : bursts

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We analyzed Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer observations of the accretion-powered 401 Hz pulsar SAXJ1808.4-3658, in order to precisely determine the source distance. While the fluences for the five transient outbursts observed from 1996 were constant to within the uncertainties, the outburst interval varied significantly, so that the time-averaged flux (and accretion rate) decreased by around 40%. By equating the time-averaged X-ray flux with the expected mass transfer rate from gravitational radiation, we derived a lower limit on the distance of 3.4 kpc. Combined with an upper limit from assuming that the four radius-expansion thermonuclear bursts observed during the 2002 October outburst reached at most the Eddington limit for a pure He atmosphere, we found that the probable distance range for the source is 3.4-3.6 kpc. The implied inclination, based on the optical/IR properties of the counterpart, is i less than or similar to 30 degrees. We compared the properties of the bursts with an ignition model. The time between bursts was long enough for hot CNO burning to significantly deplete the accreted hydrogen, so that ignition occurred in a pure helium layer underlying a stable hydrogen-burning shell. This is the first time that this burning regime has been securely observationally identified. The observed energetics of the bursts give a mean hydrogen fraction at ignition of < X > approximate to 0.1, and require that the accreted hydrogen fraction X-0 and the CNO metallicity Z(CNO) are related by Z(CNO) approximate to 0.03(X-0/0.7)(2). We show that in this burning regime, a measurement of the burst recurrence time and energetics allows the local accretion rate onto the star to be determined independently of the accreted composition, giving a new method for estimating the source distance that is in good agreement with our other estimates.

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