X-ray Observations and Infrared Identification of the Transient 7.8 s X-ray Binary Pulsar XTE J1829-098
J. P. Halpern, E. V. Gotthelf

TL;DR
This study uses X-ray and infrared observations to identify and characterize the transient X-ray binary pulsar XTE J1829-098, revealing its spectral properties, potential companion star, and orbital behavior.
Contribution
It provides the first precise localization and infrared identification of XTE J1829-098, along with analysis of its spectral characteristics and possible companion star type.
Findings
X-ray spectrum typical of X-ray binary pulsars during outburst
Infrared counterpart likely a highly reddened O or B star at 10 kpc
Observed outbursts suggest an orbital period or multiple thereof
Abstract
XMM-Newton and Chandra observations of the transient 7.8 s pulsar XTE J1829-098 are used to characterize its pulse shape and spectrum, and to facilitate a search for an optical or infrared counterpart. In outburst, the absorbed, hard X-ray spectrum with Gamma = 0.76+/-0.13 and N_H = (6.0+/-0.6) x 10^{22} cm^{-2} is typical of X-ray binary pulsars. The precise Chandra localization in a faint state leads to the identification of a probable infrared counterpart at R.A. = 18h29m43.98s, decl. = -09o51'23.0" (J2000.0) with magnitudes K=12.7, H=13.9, I>21.9, and R>23.2. If this is a highly reddened O or B star, we estimate a distance of 10 kpc, at which the maximum observed X-ray luminosity is 2x10^{36} ergs s^{-1}, typical of Be X-ray transients or wind-fed systems. The minimum observed luminosity is 3x10^{32}(d/10 kpc)^2 ergs s^{-1}. We cannot rule out the possibility that the companion is a…
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