The outburst decay of the low magnetic field magnetar SGR 0418+5729
N. Rea, G. L. Israel, J. A. Pons, R. Turolla, D. Vigano, S. Zane, P., Esposito, R. Perna, A. Papitto, G. Terreran, A. Tiengo, D. Salvetti, J. M., Girart, Aina Palau, A. Possenti, M. Burgay, E. Gogus, A. Caliandro, C., Kouveliotou, D. Gotz, R. P. Mignani, E. Ratti, L. Stella

TL;DR
This study monitors the long-term X-ray decay of the low magnetic field magnetar SGR 0418+5729, measuring its magnetic field, observing its cooling and flux decrease, and modeling its evolution to understand its properties and outburst behavior.
Contribution
It provides the first measurement of the period derivative and magnetic field of SGR 0418+5729, confirming it as the lowest magnetic field magnetar, and models its magneto-thermal evolution.
Findings
Measured period derivative: .5 sigma significance
Magnetic field .6 imes 10^{12} G, lowest among magnetars
Estimated outburst rate: about one per year per galaxy
Abstract
We report on the long term X-ray monitoring of the outburst decay of the low magnetic field magnetar SGR 0418+5729, using all the available X-ray data obtained with RXTE, SWIFT, Chandra, and XMM-Newton observations, from the discovery of the source in June 2009, up to August 2012. The timing analysis allowed us to obtain the first measurement of the period derivative of SGR 0418+5729: \dot{P}=4(1)x10^{-15} s/s, significant at ~3.5 sigma confidence level. This leads to a surface dipolar magnetic field of B_dip ~6x 10^{12} G. This measurement confirms SGR 0418+5729 as the lowest magnetic field magnetar. Following the flux and spectral evolution from the beginning of the outburst up to ~1200 days, we observe a gradual cooling of the tiny hot spot responsible for the X-ray emission, from a temperature of ~0.9 to 0.3 keV. Simultaneously, the X-ray flux decreased by about 3 orders of…
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