The X-ray spectrum of the newly discovered accreting millisecond pulsar IGR J17511-3057
A.Papitto, A.Riggio, T.Di Salvo, L.Burderi, A.D'A\`i, R.Iaria,, E.Bozzo, M.T.Menna

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed X-ray spectral and timing analysis of the accreting millisecond pulsar IGR J17511-3057, revealing its pulsation properties, spectral components, reflection features, and constraints on the system's geometry and distance.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive spectral and timing characterization of IGR J17511-3057, including pulsation detection, spectral modeling, reflection analysis, and burst properties, advancing understanding of accreting millisecond pulsars.
Findings
Pulsation at 244.83 Hz with 14.4% RMS detected.
Spectral components include disc emission, NS surface thermal emission, and Comptonization.
Reflection features indicate an inner disc radius >40 km and an inclination of 38-68 degrees.
Abstract
We report on an XMM-Newton observation of the accreting millisecond pulsar, IGR J17511-3057. Pulsations at 244.8339512(1) Hz are observed with an RMS pulsed fraction of 14.4(3)%. A precise solution for the P_orb=12487.51(2)s binary system is derived. The measured mass function indicates a main sequence companion with a mass between 0.15 and 0.44 Msun. The XMM-Newton spectrum of the source can be modelled by at least three components, multicoloured disc emission, thermal emission from the NS surface and thermal Comptonization emission. Spectral fit of the XMM-Newton data and of the RXTE data, taken in a simultaneous temporal window, constrain the Comptonization parameters: the electron temperature, kT_e=51(+6,-4) keV, is rather high, while the optical depth (tau=1.34(+0.03,-0.06)) is moderate. The energy dependence of the pulsed fraction supports the interpretation of the cooler thermal…
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