A new low magnetic field magnetar: the 2011 outburst of Swift J1822.3-1606
N. Rea (CSIC-IEEC), G. L. Israel, P. Esposito (INAF), J. A. Pons, (Alicante), A. Camero-Arranz (CSIC-IEEC), R. P. Mignani (MSSL), R. Turolla, (Padova), S. Zane (MSSL), M. Burgay, A. Possenti, S. Campana (INAF), T. Enoto, (Stanford), N. Gehrels (NASA), E. Gogus (Sabanci)

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive multi-wavelength study of the 2011 outburst of the low magnetic field magnetar Swift J1822.3-1606, revealing its timing, spectral evolution, and thermal history, and establishing its unique properties among magnetars.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed long-term X-ray monitoring and modeling of Swift J1822.3-1606, demonstrating its low magnetic field status and constraining its magnetic and thermal evolution.
Findings
Measured the spin period as 8.43772016 s.
Inferred a dipolar magnetic field of ~2.7x10^{13} G.
Observed flux decrease and spectral softening during outburst decay.
Abstract
We report on the long term X-ray monitoring with Swift, RXTE, Suzaku, Chandra and XMM-Newton of the outburst of the newly discovered magnetar Swift J1822.3-1606 (SGR 1822-1606), from the first observations soon after the detection of the short X-ray bursts which led to its discovery, through the first stages of its outburst decay (covering the time-span from July 2011, until end of April 2012). We also report on archival ROSAT observations which witnessed the source during its likely quiescent state, and on upper limits on Swift J1822.3-1606's radio-pulsed and optical emission during outburst, with the Green Bank Telescope (GBT) and the Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC), respectively. Our X-ray timing analysis finds the source rotating with a period of P=8.43772016(2) s and a period derivative \dot{P}=8.3(2)x10^{-14} s s^{-1} , which entails an inferred dipolar surface magnetic field of…
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