New orbital ephemerides for the dipping source 4U 1323-619: constraining the distance to the source
A. F. Gambino, R. Iaria, T. Di Salvo, M. Del Santo, L. Burderi, M., Matranga, F. Pintore, A. Riggio, A. Sanna

TL;DR
This study refines the orbital period and position of the X-ray binary 4U 1323-619 using 26 years of data, constrains its orbital period derivative, and estimates its distance and companion star mass, providing insights into its evolution.
Contribution
The paper provides the most precise orbital period measurement and first constraint on the period derivative for 4U 1323-619, along with an improved distance estimate using multi-wavelength data.
Findings
Orbital period of 2.9419156(6) hours with tenfold increased accuracy.
First estimate of orbital period derivative: (8±13)×10^{-12} s/s.
Distance constrained to approximately 4.2 kpc using extinction maps.
Abstract
4U 1323-619 is a low mass X-ray binary system that shows type I X-ray bursts and dips. The most accurate estimation of the orbital period is 2.941923(36) hrs and a distance from the source that is lower than 11 kpc has been proposed. We aim to obtain the orbital ephemeris, the orbital period of the system, as well as its derivative to compare the observed luminosity with that predicted by the theory of secular evolution. We took the advantage of about 26 years of X-ray data and grouped the selected observations when close in time. We folded the light curves and used the timing technique, obtaining 12 dip arrival times. We fit the delays of the dip arrival times both with a linear and a quadratic function. We locate 4U 1323-619 within a circular area centred at RA (J2000)= 201.6543\degree and DEC (J2000)= -62.1358\degree with an associated error of 0.0002\degree, and confirm the…
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