The Nature of the “6 Second” and Related X‐Ray Pulsars: Evolutionary and Dynamical Considerations

  • Ghosh P
  • Angelini L
  • White N
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Abstract

We propose that the "6 s" pulsars, as well as other possible evolutionary analogs of one of these, namely, 4U 1626-67, are products of common envelope (CE) evolution of high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs). Close HMXBs produce Thorne-Żytkov objects due to complete spiral-in during the CE phase, which turn either into black hole systems or into 6 s pulsars like 4U 0142+61 and 1E 2259+586 (van Paradijs, Taam, & van den Heuvel), which we call braking X-ray pulsars (BXPs). Relatively wide HMXBs eject the massive companion's envelope during the CE phase, producing helium star-neutron star binaries (HSNBs) like 4U 1626-67, Cyg X-3, and perhaps the newly discovered X-ray binary HD 49798. We show that the accretion flow in BXPs is likely to have a significant spherical component which would lead to soft X-ray spectra and large equivalent blackbody areas, in accordance with observations. We argue that, on theoretical grounds, HSNBs like 4U 1626-67 are expected to show both spin-up and spin-down, and that this property sets them apart from BXPs, which are expected to show only spin-down. We discuss the subsequent evolution of BXPs and HSNBs, and stress their importance as missing links in the zoo of neutron star binaries. © 1997. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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Ghosh, P., Angelini, L., & White, N. E. (1997). The Nature of the “6 Second” and Related X‐Ray Pulsars: Evolutionary and Dynamical Considerations. The Astrophysical Journal, 478(2), 713–722. https://doi.org/10.1086/303833

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