Further Constraints on Thermal Quiescent X-ray Emission from SAX J1808.4-3658
C.O. Heinke, P.G. Jonker, R. Wijnands, C.J. Deloye, R.E. Taam

TL;DR
This study constrains the thermal X-ray emission from the accreting millisecond pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658 in quiescence, suggesting enhanced core cooling and potential differences in neutron star mass compared to similar systems.
Contribution
It provides the most stringent limits on the neutron star's thermal emission in quiescence and compares cooling behaviors across multiple neutron star low-mass X-ray binaries.
Findings
Thermal luminosity of SAX J1808.4-3658 is less than 6.2×10^{30} ergs/s.
Constraints imply strongly enhanced neutron star core cooling.
Comparison indicates possible higher mass for SAX J1808.4-3658.
Abstract
We observed SAX J1808.4-3658 (1808), the first accreting millisecond pulsar, in deep quiescence with XMM-Newton and (near-simultaneously) Gemini-South. The X-ray spectrum of 1808 is similar to that observed in quiescence in 2001 and 2006, describable by an absorbed power-law with photon index 1.74+-0.11 and unabsorbed X-ray luminosity L_X=7.9+-0.7*10^{31} ergs/s, for N_H=1.3*10^{21} cm^{-2}. Fitting all the quiescent XMM-Newton X-ray spectra with a power-law, we constrain any thermally emitting neutron star with a hydrogen atmosphere to have a temperature less than 30 eV and L_{NS}(0.01-10 keV)<6.2*10^{30} ergs/s. A thermal plasma model also gives an acceptable fit to the continuum. Adding a neutron star component to the plasma model produces less stringent constraints on the neutron star; a temperature of 36^{+4}_{-8} eV and L_{NS}(0.01-10 keV)=1.3^{+0.6}_{-0.8}*10^{31} ergs/s. In the…
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