A New 626 s Periodic X-ray Source in the Direction of the Galactic Center
Sean A. Farrell (1,2), Andrew J. Gosling (3,4), Natalie A. Webb (1),, Didier Barret (1), Simon R. Rosen (2), Masaaki Sakano (2), Benoit Pancrazi, (1)((1) CESR, France, (2) University of Leicester, UK, (3) University of, Oulu, Finland, (4) University of Oxford, UK)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a 626-second periodic X-ray source near the Galactic center, likely an accreting neutron star binary, with possibilities including ultra-compact binary or intermediate polar, but with some unusual features.
Contribution
The study identifies a new 626 s periodic X-ray source and analyzes its properties, suggesting it is a neutron star binary, a potential ultra-compact binary, or an intermediate polar, expanding understanding of such systems.
Findings
Detected a 626 s X-ray modulation with high confidence
Spectral analysis shows an absorbed power law without significant variability
Source characteristics are consistent with an accreting neutron star binary
Abstract
Here we report the detection of a 626 s periodic modulation from the X-ray source 2XMM J174016.0-290337 located in the direction of the Galactic center. We present temporal and spectral analyses of archival XMM-Newton data and photometry of archived near-infrared data in order to investigate the nature of this source. We find that the X-ray light curve shows a strong modulation at 626 +/- 2 s with a confidence level > 99.9% and a pulsed fraction of 54%. Spectral fitting demonstrates that the spectrum is consistent with an absorbed power law. No significant spectral variability was observed over the 626 s period. We have investigated the possibility that the 626 s period is orbital in nature (either that of an ultra-compact X-ray binary or an AM CVn) or related to the spin of a compact object (either an accretion powered pulsar or an intermediate polar). The X-ray properties of the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
