Orbital solution leading to an acceptable interpretation for the enigmatic gamma-ray binary HESS J0632+057
Yuki Moritani (1), Takafumi Kawano (2), Sho Chimasu (3), Akiko Kawachi, (3), Hiromitsu Takahashi (2), Jumpei Takata (4), Alex C. Carciofi (5) ((1), The University of Tokyo, (2) Hiroshima University, (3) Tokai University, (4), Huazhong University of Science, Technology

TL;DR
This study refines the orbital parameters of the gamma-ray binary HESS J0632+057 using spectroscopic and X-ray data, suggesting the compact object is likely a pulsar with a less eccentric orbit and outbursts linked to its passage through the Be star's disk.
Contribution
The paper provides a new orbital solution for HESS J0632+057, combining spectroscopic and X-ray observations, and offers evidence supporting a pulsar as the compact object.
Findings
Orbital period refined to approximately 313 days.
Orbit is less eccentric with e ~ 0.6.
Outbursts occur near periastron and apastron, linked to Be disk interaction.
Abstract
High-dispersion spectroscopic monitoring of HESS J0632+057 has been carried out over four orbital cycles in order to search for orbital modulation, covering the entire orbital phase. We have measured radial velocity of H emission line with the method introduced by Shafter et al. (1986), which has been successfully applied to some Be stars. The velocity is seen to increase much earlier than expected for the orbital period of 315 days, and much more steeply than expected at around "apastron". The period of the H modulation is found to be as days. We have also analyzed Swift/XRT data from 2009 to 2015 to study the orbital modulation, selecting the data with good statistics ( 30 counts). With additional two-year data to the previous works, the orbital period has been updated to days, which is consistent with the previous X-ray periods…
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