Quark-nova remnants IV: Application to radio emitting AXP transients
Rachid Ouyed, Denis Leahy, Brian Niebergal (Department of Physics, and Astronomy, University of Calgary, Canada)

TL;DR
This paper extends the quark-nova model to explain radio-emitting transient AXPs, fitting observed X-ray and radio behaviors, and predicts delays between X-ray and radio emissions based on magnetic bubble dynamics.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel application of the quark-nova model to transient AXPs, incorporating accretion from a degenerate ring and explaining radio emission mechanisms and timing delays.
Findings
Model fits observed X-ray outbursts and blackbody evolution.
Radio pulsations explained by magnetic bubble dissipation.
Predicted delays of ~1 year and ~1 month for specific sources.
Abstract
(Abridged) XTE J1810-197 and 1E 1547.0-5408 are two transient AXPs exhibiting radio emission with unusual properties. In addition, their spin down rates during outburst show opposite trends, which so far has no explanation. Here, we extend our quark-nova model for AXPs to include transient AXPs, in which the outbursts are caused by transient accretion events from a Keplerian (iron-rich) degenerate ring. For a ring with inner and outer radii of 23.5 km and 26.5 km, respectively, our model gives a good fit to the observed X-ray outburst from XTE J1810-197 and the behavior of temperature, luminosity, and area of the two X-ray blackbodies with time. The two blackbodies in our model are related to a heat front (i.e. Bohm diffusion front) propagating along the ring's surface and an accretion hot spot on the quark star surface. Radio pulsations in our model are caused by dissipation at the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic confinement fusion research · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics · Plasma Diagnostics and Applications
