Discovery of a 168.8 s X-ray pulsar transiting in front of its Be companion star in the Large Magellanic Cloud
P. Maggi, F. Haberl, R. Sturm, W. Pietsch, A. Rau, J. Greiner, A., Udalski, and M. Sasaki

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of LXP169, a unique eclipsing Be X-ray binary in the Large Magellanic Cloud, featuring a 168.8 s pulsar and the first observed eclipse of its companion star, providing new insights into such systems.
Contribution
It presents the first observation of an eclipsing Be X-ray binary with a pulsar, offering novel data on the system's geometry and neutron star properties.
Findings
Detected a 168.8 s pulsar with stable spin period.
Confirmed the companion star is eclipsed during transit.
Observed significant X-ray variability and NIR excess.
Abstract
We report the discovery of LXP169, a new high-mass X-ray binary (XRB) in the LMC. The optical counterpart has been identified and appears to exhibit an eclipsing light curve. We performed follow-up observations to clarify the eclipsing nature of the system. Energy spectra and time series were extracted from two XMM-Newton observations to search for pulsations, characterise the spectrum, and measure spectral and timing changes. Long-term X-ray variability was studied using archival ROSAT data. The XMM positions were used to identify the optical counterpart. We obtained UV to NIR photometry to characterise the companion, along with its 4000 d long I-band light curve. We observed LXP169 with Swift at two predicted eclipse times. We found a spin period of 168.8 s that did not change between two XMM observations. The X-ray spectrum, well characterised by a power law, was harder when the…
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