SRGe J194401.8+284452 -- an X-ray Cataclysmic Variable in the Field of the Gamma-Ray Source 4FGL J1943.9+2841
A.I. Kolbin, A.V. Karpova, M.V. Suslikov, I.F. Bikmaev, M.R. Gilfanov,, I.M. Khamitov, Yu.A. Shibanov, D.A. Zyuzin, G.M. Beskin, V.L., Plokhotnichenko, A.G. Gutaev, S.V. Karpov, N.V. Lyapsina, P.S. Medvedev, R.A., Sunyaev, A.Yu. Kirichenko, M.A. Gorbachev, E.N. Irtuganov

TL;DR
This study identifies SRGe J194401.8+284452 as an intermediate polar cataclysmic variable at 415 pc, exhibiting rapid luminosity changes and optical pulsations, but unlikely to be associated with the nearby gamma-ray source.
Contribution
The paper provides multi-wavelength analysis confirming the nature of SRGe J194401.8+284452 as an intermediate polar cataclysmic variable and clarifies its non-association with the gamma-ray source 4FGL J1943.9+2841.
Findings
Confirmed optical counterpart at 415 pc distance
Detected regular 8-minute optical pulsations in low state
Established the source as an intermediate polar CV
Abstract
SRGe J194401.8+284452 is the brightest point-like X-ray object within the position uncertainty ellipse of an unidentified -ray source 4FGL J1943.9+2841. We performed multi-wavelength spectral and photometric studies to determine its nature and possible association with the -ray source. We firmly established its optical counterpart with the Gaia based distance of about 415 pc. Our data show that the object is a cataclysmic variable with an orbital period of about 1.5 hours. SRGe J194401.8+284452 exhibits fast spontaneous transitions between the high and low luminosity states simultaneously in the optical and X-rays, remaining relatively stable between the transitions on scales of several months/years. This can be caused by an order of magnitude changes in the accretion rate. The brightness of the source is about 17 mag and 20 mag in the optical range and $5\times…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
