Quasi-spherical accretion in low-luminosity X-ray pulsars: Theory vs. observations
K. Postnov, N. Shakura, A. Kochetkova, L. Hjalmarsdotter (Moscow M.V., Lomonosov State University, Sternberg Astronomical Institute)

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical model of quasi-spherical accretion in low-luminosity X-ray pulsars, linking observed spin behaviors to neutron star magnetic fields and accretion processes, and validates it with observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model of subsonic quasi-spherical accretion that explains spin variations and magnetic field estimates without requiring magnetar-like fields.
Findings
Model explains slow rotation without magnetar fields.
Magnetic field estimates align with cyclotron line data.
Allows wind velocity estimation from spin measurements.
Abstract
Quasi-spherical subsonic accretion can be realized in slowly rotating wind-fed X-ray pulsars (XPSRs) at X-ray luminosities <4 10^{36} erg/s. In this regime the accreting matter settles down subsonically onto the rotating magnetosphere, forming an extended quasi-static shell. The shell mediates the angular momentum removal from the rotating NS magnetosphere by shear turbulent viscosity in the boundary layer or via large-scale convective motions. In the last case the differential rotation law in the shell is close to iso-angular-momentum rotation. The accretion rate through the shell is determined by the ability of the plasma to enter the magnetosphere due to Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities while taking cooling into account. Measurements of spin-up/spin-down rates of quasi-spherically wind accreting XPSRs in equilibrium with known orbital periods (like e.g. GX 301-2 and Vela X-1) enable…
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