Abstract
The magnetar Swift J1818.0–1607 was discovered in 2020 March when Swift detected a 9 ms hard X-ray burst and a long-lived outburst. Prompt X-ray observations revealed a spin period of 1.36 s, soon confirmed by the discovery of radio pulsations. We report here on the analysis of the Swift burst and follow-up X-ray and radio observations. The burst average luminosity was L burst ∼ 2 × 10 39 erg s −1 (at 4.8 kpc). Simultaneous observations with XMM-Newton and NuSTAR three days after the burst provided a source spectrum well fit by an absorbed blackbody ( = (1.13 ± 0.03) × 10 23 cm −2 and kT = 1.16 ± 0.03 keV) plus a power law (Γ = 0.0 ± 1.3) in the 1–20 keV band, with a luminosity of ∼8 × 10 34 erg s −1 , dominated by the blackbody emission. From our timing analysis, we derive a dipolar magnetic field B ∼ 7 × 10 14 G, spin-down luminosity erg s −1 , and characteristic age of 240 yr, the shortest currently known. Archival observations led to an upper limit on the quiescent luminosity <5.5 × 10 33 erg s −1 , lower than the value expected from magnetar cooling models at the source characteristic age. A 1 hr radio observation with the Sardinia Radio Telescope taken about 1 week after the X-ray burst detected a number of strong and short radio pulses at 1.5 GHz, in addition to regular pulsed emission; they were emitted at an average rate 0.9 min −1 and accounted for ∼50% of the total pulsed radio fluence. We conclude that Swift J1818.0–1607 is a peculiar magnetar belonging to the small, diverse group of young neutron stars with properties straddling those of rotationally and magnetically powered pulsars. Future observations will make a better estimation of the age possible by measuring the spin-down rate in quiescence.
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CITATION STYLE
Esposito, P., Rea, N., Borghese, A., Zelati, F. C., Viganò, D., Israel, G. L., … Zane, S. (2020). A Very Young Radio-loud Magnetar. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 896(2), L30. https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ab9742
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