Kinematic distinction of the two subpopulations of X-ray pulsars
M. Pri\v{s}egen

TL;DR
This study investigates the kinematic differences between two subpopulations of Be/X-ray binaries, revealing unexpected velocity patterns that challenge the hypothesis of distinct supernova origins.
Contribution
It provides the first kinematic analysis of Be/X-ray binary subpopulations using Gaia data, testing the supernova channel hypothesis with new statistical evidence.
Findings
Short-spin subpopulation has higher peculiar velocities in the Galaxy.
Kinematic distinctions are observed but contradict supernova channel expectations.
Evidence suggests different formation or evolutionary processes for the subpopulations.
Abstract
The population of Be/X-ray binaries shows strong evidence of bimodality, especially in the spin period of neutron stars. Several physical mechanisms may produce this bimodality. The most favored candidate mechanisms are two distinct supernova channels or different accretion modes of the neutron stars in Be/X-ray binaries. Investigating the kinematics of these systems may provide some additional insight into the physics of this bimodality. If the two Be/X-ray binary subpopulations arise from two distinct supernova types, then the two subpopulations should have different peculiar (systemic) velocities. This can be tested either directly, by measuring the velocity of the system, or indirectly, by measuring the position of the system with respect to its birthplace. Using the most recent Gaia dataset and the newest catalogs of Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) star clusters, we analyzed the…
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