Radio disappearance of the magnetar XTE J1810-197 and continued X-ray timing
F. Camilo, S. M. Ransom, J. P. Halpern, J. A. J. Alford, I. Cognard,, J. E. Reynolds, S. Johnston, J. Sarkissian, and W. van Straten

TL;DR
This study documents the radio disappearance of magnetar XTE J1810-197 in 2008, analyzing its radio and X-ray timing, flux, and polarization over a decade, revealing stable X-ray activity despite the cessation of radio emissions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multi-year observational analysis of the magnetar’s radio and X-ray behavior, highlighting the disconnect between radio cessation and ongoing X-ray activity.
Findings
Radio flux density decreased by a factor of 20 before disappearing.
X-ray timing shows stable activity after radio cessation.
Magnetar's magnetic geometry remained consistent despite radio disappearance.
Abstract
We report on timing, flux density, and polarimetric observations of the transient magnetar and 5.54 s radio pulsar XTE J1810-197 using the GBT, Nancay, and Parkes radio telescopes beginning in early 2006, until its sudden disappearance as a radio source in late 2008. Repeated observations through 2016 have not detected radio pulsations again. The torque on the neutron star, as inferred from its rotation frequency derivative f-dot, decreased in an unsteady manner by a factor of 3 in the first year of radio monitoring. In contrast, during its final year as a detectable radio source, the torque decreased steadily by only 9%. The period-averaged flux density, after decreasing by a factor of 20 during the first 10 months of radio monitoring, remained steady in the next 22 months, at an average of 0.7+/-0.3 mJy at 1.4 GHz, while still showing day-to-day fluctuations by factors of a few. There…
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