4U 1556-60 as a very faint neutron star X-ray binary at 700 pc with an undetected radio jet
Eliot C. Pattie, Thomas J. Maccarone, Thomas Russell, Matteo Bachetti, Nathalie Degenaar, Thomas Kupfer

TL;DR
This study reinterprets 4U 1556-60 as a nearby, faint neutron star X-ray binary with ultracompact features, based on new distance measurements and multiwavelength observations, revealing its low luminosity and absence of a detectable radio jet.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed analysis of 4U 1556-60 at a close distance, proposing it as a candidate ultracompact neutron star X-ray binary with unique properties.
Findings
Located at 700 pc, 4U 1556-60 has a low X-ray luminosity (~2x10^34 erg/s).
Radio observations show no jet detection, with an upper limit much fainter than black hole jets.
X-ray spectral and timing properties are consistent with low accretion rate neutron star systems.
Abstract
4U 1556-60 is a low-mass X-ray binary that was discovered more than 50 years ago as a persistent X-ray source; however, very little was known about it. Recently, Gaia obtained a parallax for the optical counterpart that places 4U 1556-60 at a distance of only about 700 pc, making it one of the closest X-ray binaries known to date. This close distance drastically alters what was previously assumed about the source. We revisit 4U 1556-60 in light of the newly determined distance of 700 pc, reinterpreting its literature and presenting new X-ray and radio observations to better understand various characteristics of the system. We conclude that a scenario in which 4U 1556-60 is a candidate ultracompact neutron star X-ray binary at a distance of ~700 pc is able to explain the observed properties of the source. It resides at a persistent X-ray luminosity of ~2x10^34 erg/s, an unusual value for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
