The Double-Peaked 2008 Outburst of the Accreting Milli-Second X-ray Pulsar, IGR J00291+5934
F.Lewis, D.M.Russell, P.G.Jonker, M.Linares, V.Tudose, P.Roche,, J.S.Clark, M.A.P.Torres, D.Maitra, C.G.Bassa, D.Steeghs, A.Patruno,, S.Migliari, R.Wijnands, G.Nelemans, L.J.Kewley, V.E.Stroud, M.Modjaz,, J.S.Bloom, C.H.Blake, D.Starr

TL;DR
This study documents the unusual double-peaked 2008 outburst of the accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar IGR J00291+5934, analyzing multi-wavelength data to understand its emission mechanisms and accretion processes.
Contribution
First detailed multi-wavelength analysis of the double-peaked outburst, including radio-X-ray SEDs and optical/IR variability, revealing insights into disc-jet coupling in this neutron star system.
Findings
Unusual double-peaked outburst morphology with a plateau phase.
Detection of a transient NIR excess consistent with a synchrotron jet.
Optical spectrum shows a double-peaked H alpha profile indicating an accretion disc.
Abstract
In August 2008, the accreting milli-second X-ray pulsar (AMXP), IGR J00291+5934, underwent an outburst lasting ~ 100 days, the first since its discovery in 2004. We present data from the double-peaked outburst from Faulkes Telescope North, the INT, the Keck Telescope, PAIRITEL, the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope and the Swift, XMM-Newton and RXTE X-ray missions. We study the outburst's evolution at various wavelengths. We study the light curve morphology, presenting the first radio-X-ray Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs) for this source and the most detailed UV-IR SEDs for any outbursting AMXP. We show simple models that attempt to identify the emission mechanisms responsible. We analyse short-timescale optical variability, and compare a medium resolution optical spectrum with those from 2004. The outburst morphology is unusual for an AMXP, comprising two peaks, the second…
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