Long-term pulse period evolution of the ultra-luminous X-ray pulsar NGC 7793 P13
F. Fuerst (1), D. J. Walton (2), M. Heida (3), M. Bachetti (4), C., Pinto (5), M. J. Middleton (6), M. Brightman (7), H. P. Earnshaw (7), D., Barret (8), A. C. Fabian (2), P. Kretschmar (9), K. Pottschmidt (10, 11),, A. Ptak (11), T. Roberts (12), D. Stern (13), N. Webb (8)

TL;DR
This study presents a four-year monitoring of the ULXP NGC 7793 P13, revealing continuous spin-up, orbital and flux periodicities, spectral stability, and changes in accretion geometry possibly due to disk precession.
Contribution
It provides the first long-term, multi-instrument analysis of NGC 7793 P13, updating its orbital parameters and revealing new insights into its accretion behavior and spectral stability.
Findings
Continuous spin-up with d7 P b1 -3.8e-11 s/s.
Updated orbital period of 64.86 b1 0.19 days.
Stable high-energy hardness ratios despite flux variations.
Abstract
Ultra-luminous X-ray pulsars (ULXPs) provide a unique opportunity to study super-Eddington accretion. We present the results of a monitoring campaign of ULXP NGC 7793 P13. Over our four-year monitoring campaign with Swift, XMM-Newton, and NuSTAR, we measured a continuous spin-up with ~ -3.8e-11 s/s. The strength of the spin-up is independent of the observed X-ray flux, indicating that despite a drop in observed flux in 2019, accretion onto the source has continued at largely similar rates. The source entered an apparent off-state in early 2020, which might have resulted in a change in the accretion geometry as no pulsations were found in observations in July and August 2020. We used the long-term monitoring to update the orbital ephemeris and the periodicities seen in both the observed optical/UV and X-ray fluxes. We find that the optical/UV period is very stable over the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
