Multi-frequency observations of SWIFT J1626.6-5156
P. Reig (FORTH/U. of Crete), E. Nespoli (OAUV/VIU), J. Fabregat (OAUV), and R. Mennickent (U. of Concepcion)

TL;DR
This study presents multi-frequency observations of the X-ray pulsar SWIFT J1626.6-5156, revealing its nature as a Be/X-ray binary with an early B-type companion through optical, IR, and X-ray spectral analysis.
Contribution
First comprehensive multi-frequency analysis confirming SWIFT J1626.6-5156 as a Be/X-ray binary with detailed spectral classification.
Findings
Optical and IR spectra indicate an early B-type star companion.
X-ray variability shows stages of decay, flaring, and quiescence.
Spectral features and variability patterns are typical of accreting X-ray pulsars.
Abstract
SWIFT J1626.6-5156 is an X-ray pulsar that was discovered in December 2005 during an X-ray outburst. Although the X-ray data suggest that the system is a high-mass X-ray binary, very little information exists on the nature of the optical counterpart. We have analysed all RXTE observations since its discovery, archived optical spectroscopic and photometric data and obtained for the first time near-IR spectra. The K-band spectrum shows HeI 20581 A and HI 21660 A (Brackett-gamma) in emission, which confine the spectral type of the companion to be earlier than B2.5. The H-band spectrum exhibits the HI Br-18-11 recombination series in emission. The most prominent feature of the optical band spectrum is the strong emission of the Balmer line Halpha. The 4000-5000 A spectrum contains HeII and numerous HeI ines in absorption, indicating an early B-type star. The source shows three consecutive…
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