Constraining the properties of neutron star crusts with the transient low-mass X-ray binary Aql X-1

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Abstract

Aql X-1 is a prolific transient neutron star low-mass X-ray binary that exhibits an accretion outburst approximately once every year. Whether the thermal X-rays detected in intervening quiescent episodes are the result of cooling of the neutron star or due to continued lowlevel accretion remains unclear. In this work, we use Swift data obtained after the long and bright 2011 and 2013 outbursts, as well as the short and faint 2015 outburst, to investigate the hypothesis that cooling of the accretion-heated neutron star crust dominates the quiescent thermal emission in AqlX-1.We demonstrate that theX-ray light curves and measured neutron star surface temperatures are consistent with the expectations of the crust cooling paradigm. By using a thermal evolution code, we find that ≃1.2-3.2 MeV nucleon-1 of shallow heat release describes the observational data well, depending on the assumed mass-accretion rate and temperature of the stellar core. We find no evidence for varying strengths of this shallow heating after different outbursts, but this could be due to limitations of the data. We argue that monitoring Aql X-1 for up to ≃s1 yr after future outbursts can be a powerful tool to break model degeneracies and solve open questions about the magnitude, depth, and origin of shallow heating in neutron star crusts.

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Waterhouse, A. C., Degenaar, N., Wijnands, R., Brown, E. F., Miller, J. M., Altamirano, D., & Linares, M. (2016). Constraining the properties of neutron star crusts with the transient low-mass X-ray binary Aql X-1. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 456(4), 4001–4014. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv2959

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