Observational appearance of rapidly rotating neutron stars: X-ray bursts, cooling tail method, and radius determination
Valery F. Suleimanov, Juri Poutanen, and Klaus Werner

TL;DR
This paper develops analytical and computational methods to account for rapid neutron star rotation effects on X-ray observations, improving radius estimates by correcting for rotational distortion and viewing angle.
Contribution
It introduces relativistic formulae and a modified cooling tail method to accurately determine neutron star radii considering rapid rotation effects.
Findings
Rotation can cause radius overestimation by 3-3.5 km if ignored.
Application to SAX J1810.8-2609 yields smaller radius estimates when rotation is considered.
The method improves neutron star parameter estimation accuracy.
Abstract
Neutron stars (NSs) in low-mass X-ray binaries rotate at frequencies high enough to significantly deviate from sphericity ( 200--600 Hz). We investigate the effects of rapid rotation on the observational appearance of a NS. We propose analytical formulae relating gravitational mass and equatorial radius of the rapidly rotating NS to the mass and radius of a non-rotating NS of the same baryonic mass using accurate fully relativistic computations. We compute spectra from an oblate rotating NS observed at different inclination angles using the modified oblate Schwarzschild (MOS) approximation, where light bending is computed in Schwarzschild metric, but frame dragging and quadrupole moment of a NS are approximately accounted for in the photon redshift calculations. We generalize the cooling tail method to the case of a rapidly rotating NS to obtain the most probable…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · High-pressure geophysics and materials
