NuSTAR discovery of a 3.76-second transient magnetar near Sagittarius A*
Kaya Mori, Eric V. Gotthelf, Shuo Zhang, Hongjun An, Frederick K., Baganoff, Nicolas M. Barriere, Andrei Beloborodov, Steven E. Boggs, Finn E., Christensen, William W. Craig, Francois Dufour, Brian W. Grefenstette,, Charles J. Hailey, Fiona Anne Harrison, Jaesub Hong

TL;DR
The paper reports the discovery of a transient magnetar near Sagittarius A* with detailed timing, spectral, and location analysis, revealing its properties and implications for neutron star populations in the Galactic Center.
Contribution
First detection of a transient magnetar close to the Galactic Center with comprehensive timing and spectral characterization, expanding understanding of magnetar populations.
Findings
Detected 3.76-s pulsations indicating a magnetar.
Measured magnetic field strength of 1.6x10^14 G.
Located at or near the Galactic Center.
Abstract
We report the discovery of 3.76-s pulsations from a new burst source near Sgr A* observed by the NuSTAR Observatory. The strong signal from SGR J1745-29 presents a complex pulse profile modulated with pulsed fraction 27+/-3 % in the 3-10 keV band. Two observations spaced 9 days apart yield a spin-down rate of Pdot = (6.5+/-1.4)x10^{-12}. This implies a magnetic field B = 1.6x10^14 G, spin-down power Edot = 5x10^33 erg/s, and characteristic age P/2Pdot = 9x10^3 yr, for the rotating dipole model. However, the current Pdot may be erratic, especially during outburst. The flux and modulation remained steady during the observations and the 3-79 keV spectrum is well fitted by a combined blackbody plus power-law model with temperature kT_BB = 0.96+/-0.02 keV and photon index = 1.5+/-0.4, respectively. The neutral hydrogen column density (nH ~ 1.4x10^23 cm^{-2}) measured by NuSTAR and Swift…
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