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      A strongly heated neutron star in the transient Z source MAXI J0556-332

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          Abstract

          We present Chandra, XMM-Newton, and Swift observations of the quiescent neutron star in the transient low-mass X-ray binary MAXI J0556-332. Observations of the source made during outburst (with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer) reveal tracks in its X-ray color--color and hardness--intensity diagrams that closely resemble those of the neutron-star Z sources, suggesting that MAXI J0556-332 had near- or super-Eddington luminosities for a large part of its ~16 month outburst. A comparison of these diagrams with those of other Z sources suggests a source distance of 46+/-15 kpc. Fits to the quiescent spectra of MAXI J0556-332 with a neutron-star atmosphere model (with or without a power-law component) result in distance estimates of 45+/-3 kpc, for a neutron-star radius of 10 km and a mass of 1.4 Msun. The spectra show the effective surface temperature of the neutron star decreasing monotonically over the first ~500 days of quiescence, except for two observations that were likely affected by enhanced low-level accretion. The temperatures we obtain for the fits that include a power-law (kT_eff=184-308 eV) are much higher than those seen for any other neutron star heated by accretion, while the inferred cooling (e-folding) timescale (~200 days) is similar to other sources. Fits without a power-law yield higher temperatures (kT_eff=190-336 eV) and a shorter e-folding time (~160 days). Our results suggest that the heating of the neutron-star crust in MAXI J0556-332 was considerably more efficient than for other systems, possibly indicating additional or more efficient shallow heat sources in its crust.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2014-08-14
          2014-11-14
          Article
          10.1088/0004-637X/795/2/131
          1408.3276
          f117b9a9-0639-40ea-a4aa-e3397852e98c

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          Accepted for publication: 2014, ApJ, 795, 131 (13 pages)
          astro-ph.HE

          High energy astrophysical phenomena
          High energy astrophysical phenomena

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