Discovery of 1-5 Hz flaring at high luminosity in SAX J1808.4-3658
Peter Bult, Michiel van der Klis

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of 1-5 Hz X-ray flaring at high luminosity in SAX J1808.4-3658, revealing new insights into accretion dynamics during outbursts.
Contribution
It identifies a new high luminosity flaring phenomenon and links it to the dead-disk instability mechanism, expanding understanding of accretion behavior in millisecond X-ray pulsars.
Findings
Flaring occurs for ~3 days at >30 mCrab luminosity.
Flaring shows sharp spikes with quasi-regular separation.
Flaring correlates with pulse amplitude and flux.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a 1--5~Hz X-ray flaring phenomenon observed at ~mCrab near peak luminosity in the 2008 and 2011 outbursts of the accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar SAX J1808.4--3658 in observations with the \textit{Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer}. In each of the two outbursts this high luminosity flaring is seen for 3 continuous days and switches on and off on a timescale of 1--2~hr. The flaring can be seen directly in the light curve, where it shows sharp spikes of emission at quasi-regular separation. In the power spectrum it produces a broad noise component, which peaks at 1--5~Hz. The total 0.05--10~Hz variability has a fractional rms amplitude of 20\%--45\%, well in excess of the 8\%--12\% rms broad-band noise usually seen in power spectra of SAX J1808.4--3658. We perform a detailed timing analysis of the flaring and study its relation to the 401~Hz…
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