Glitches in Anomalous X-ray Pulsars
Rim Dib, Victoria M. Kaspi, Fotis P. Gavriil

TL;DR
This study reports long-term observations of two AXPs, revealing frequent glitches, diverse glitch behaviors, and flux variations, challenging existing models and suggesting possible core involvement in large glitches.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive long-term analysis of AXP glitches, identifying two glitch classes and highlighting their complex recovery and radiative behaviors.
Findings
AXPs are among the most actively glitching neutron stars.
Large glitches often have unusual recovery behaviors.
AXP glitches can be radiatively loud or quiet, with little correlation to flux changes.
Abstract
(Abridged) We report on 8.7 and 7.6 yr of RXTE observations of the Anomalous X-ray Pulsars (AXPs) RXS J170849.0-400910 and 1E 1841-045, respectively. These observations, part of a larger RXTE AXP monitoring program, have allowed us to study the long-term timing, pulsed flux, and pulse profile evolution of these objects. We report on four new glitches, one from RXS J170849.0-400910 and three from 1E 1841-045. With nearly all known persistent AXPs now seen to glitch, such behavior is clearly generic to this source class. We show that in terms of fractional frequency change, AXPs are among the most actively glitching neutron stars. However, in terms of absolute glitch amplitude, AXP glitches are unremarkable. We show that the largest AXP glitches observed thus far have recoveries that are unusual among those of radio pulsar glitches, with the combination of recovery time scale and fraction…
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