Discovery of a very young high-mass X-ray binary associated with the supernova remnant MCSNRJ0513-6724 in the LMC
C. Maitra, F. Haberl, M. D. Filipovic, A. Udalski, P. J. Kavanagh, S., Carpano, P. Maggi, M. Sasaki, R. P. Norris, A. O'Brien, A. Hotan, E. Lenc, M.K. Szymanski, I. Soszynski, R. Poleski, K. Ulaczyk, P. Pietrukowicz, S., Kozlowski, J. Skowron, P. Mroz, K. Rybicki, P. Iwanek

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the youngest high-mass X-ray binary associated with a supernova remnant in the Large Magellanic Cloud, providing insights into early binary evolution and magnetic field development.
Contribution
It presents the first identification of a very young HMXB linked to a supernova remnant, with detailed spectral and timing analysis revealing its evolutionary stage.
Findings
HMXB is located at the center of an SNR in the LMC.
The system shows tentative X-ray pulsations with a 4.4 s period.
Estimated SNR age is less than 6,000 years.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a very young high-mass X-ray binary (HMXB) system associated with the supernova remnant (SNR) MCSNRJ0513-6724 in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), using XMM-Newton X-ray observations. The HMXB is located at the geometrical centre of extended soft X-ray emission, which we confirm as an SNR. The HMXB spectrum is consistent with an absorbed power law with spectral index ~1.6 and a luminosity of 7x10^{33} ergs/s (0.2--12 keV). Tentative X-ray pulsations are observed with a periodicity of 4.4 s and the OGLE I-band light curve of the optical counterpart from more than 17.5 years reveals a period of 2.2324\pm0.0003 d, which we interpret as the orbital period of the binary system. The X-ray spectrum of the SNR is consistent with non-equilibrium shock models as expected for young/less evolved SNRs. From the derived ionisation time scale we estimate the age of the SNR…
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