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ON THE NATURE OF PULSE PROFILE VARIATIONS AND TIMING NOISE IN ACCRETING MILLISECOND PULSARS

Juri Poutanen et al 2009 ApJ 706 L129-L132   doi: 10.1088/0004-637X/706/1/L129  Help

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Juri Poutanen1, Askar Ibragimov1,2,3 and Marja Annala1
1 Department of Physics, Astronomy Division, P.O. Box 3000, FIN-90014 University of Oulu, Finland
2 Astronomy Department, Kazan State University, Kremlyovskaya 18, 420008 Kazan, Russia
3 Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences, Sabancı University, Orhanlı, Tuzla, 34956 İstanbul, Turkey
E-mail: juri.poutanen@oulu.fi

ABSTRACT. Timing noise in the data on accretion-powered millisecond pulsars (AMP) appears as irregular pulse phase jumps on timescales from hours to weeks. A large systematic phase drift is also observed in the first discovered AMP SAX J1808.4 – 3658. To study the origin of these timing features, we use here the data of the well studied 2002 outburst of SAX J1808.4 – 3658. We develop first a model for pulse profile formation accounting for the screening of the antipodal emitting spot by the accretion disk. We demonstrate that the variations of the visibility of the antipodal spot associated with the receding accretion disk cause a systematic shift in Fourier phases, observed together with the changes in the pulse form. We show that a strong secondary maximum can be observed only in narrow intervals of inner disk radii, which explains the very short appearance of the double-peaked profiles in SAX J1808.4 – 3658. By directly fitting the pulse profile shapes with our model, we find that the main parameters of the emitting spot, such as its mean latitude and longitude as well as the emissivity pattern, change irregularly causing small shifts in pulse phase, and the strong profile variations are caused by the increasing inner disk radius. We finally notice that significant variations in the pulse profiles in the 2002 and 2008 outbursts of SAX J1808.4 – 3658 happen at fluxes differing by a factor of 2, which can be explained if the inner disk radius is not a simple function of the accretion rate, but depends on the previous history.

Key words: accretion, accretion disks; methods: data analysis; pulsars: individual (SAX J1808.4 – 3658); stars: neutron; X-rays: binaries

Print publication: Issue 1 (2009 November 20)
Received 2009 September 3, accepted for publication 2009 October 20
Published 2009 November 3

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