VLBA Astrometry of the Fastest-spinning Magnetar Swift J1818.0-1607: A Large Trigonometric Distance & A Small Transverse Velocity
Hao Ding, Marcus E. Lower, Adam T. Deller, Ryan M. Shannon, Fernando, Camilo, and John Sarkissian

TL;DR
This study used VLBA astrometry over three years to measure the distance and proper motion of the fastest-spinning magnetar Swift J1818.0-1607, revealing a large distance and small transverse velocity, which informs magnetar formation theories.
Contribution
It provides the second parallax measurement for a magnetar, establishing a precise distance and low transverse velocity, and compares magnetar velocities with pulsar distributions to explore their origins.
Findings
Distance to Swift J1818.0-1607 is approximately 9.4 kpc.
Proper motion of the magnetar is about 8.5 mas/yr.
Magnetar transverse velocity is around 48 km/s, lower than typical pulsars.
Abstract
In addition to being the most magnetic objects in the known universe, magnetars are the only objects observed to generate fast-radio-burst-like emissions. The formation mechanism of magnetars is still highly debated, and may potentially be probed with the magnetar velocity distribution. We carried out a 3-year-long astrometric campaign on Swift J1818.0-1607 -- the fastest-spinning magnetar, using the Very Long Baseline Array. After applying the phase-calibrating 1D interpolation strategy, we obtained a small proper motion of 8.5 magnitude, and a parallax of mas (uncertainties at confidence throughout the Letter) for Swift J1818.0-1607. The latter is the second magnetar parallax, and is among the smallest neutron star parallaxes ever determined. From the parallax, we derived the distance kpc, which locates Swift…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
