IGR J18245-2452


Other name = PSR J1824-2452I

Type Period Radio Counterpart Optical Counterpart
R.A. (J2000) Dec. (J2000) References R.A. (J2000) Dec. (J2000) References
NS LMXB/Burster 18h 24m 32.51s -24 ° 52' 07.9" (+- 0.5") Pavan et al. 2013 ATel 4981 18h 24m 32.496s -24°ree; 52' 07.799" Pallanca et al. (2013) (ATel 5003)
Published Papers
Miscellaneous :
Heinke et al. (2013) ATel 4927 :
  • Swift refinement of the X-ray position
  • Inside the core of the globular cluster M28
  • inconsistent with a previously known quiescent X-ray binary
  • Substantial X-ray variability > factor 2 in less than 100s
  • Spectral analysis => NH=4.4 x 1021 cm-2 Γ=1.41
Romano et al. (2013) ATel 4929 :
  • Swift observation, after trigger by BAT
  • Γ=1.35, NH=4.4 x1021 cm-2, in window timing mode
  • Count rate around 10 cts/s showing two large flares reaching 20 and 40 cts/s
Campana et al. (2013) ATel 4934 :
  • Search for timing signatures in XRT window timing mode data
  • Possible modulation at 6.6 mHz (150s) in first observation
  • => possible quasi periodic signal or orbital Doppler modulation
Papitto et al. (2013) ATel 4959 :
  • Swift detection of a type I X-ray burst from a position consistent with that of the IGR
  • Other source not excluded but no other active source in M28 at the moment
  • Burst spectrum => 2.5 keV bbody
Linares (2013) ATel 4960 :
  • Time resolved spectroscopy of the burst
  • =>thermal spectrum kT decreasing from 2.7 to 1.1 keV
  • Cooling tail => thermonuclear burst
  • => LMXB +NS; 1st of such object in M28
  • Γ of the XRT spectrum consistent with low luminosity (Atoll) LMXBs
Serino et al.(2013) ATel 4961 :
  • 2 X-ray bursts detected by Maxi
Monard & Kuulkers (2013) ATel 4964 :
  • Optical 'amateur' observations => brightened star at Dec = 18h 24m 32.93s, -24deg 51' 59.6" (with an astrometric uncertainty of less than <0.03" in RA and <0.5" in Dec)
  • Inferred absolute visual magnitude ~ -2 => in the range of that found for active low-mass X-ray binaries
  • Source is however 11.6" away from Swift position
  • no optical sources found at Swift position
Pavan et al. (2013) ATel 4981 :
  • ATCA observations at 5.5 and 9 GHz
  • Detection of a source at both frequency at 4.8" from the best XRT position (that has 3.5" error)
  • Mean flux densities 0.62 & 0.75 mJy at 9 & 5.5 GHz respectively.
  • Mean spectral index ~ 0.4
  • ATCA source = only radio source detected within the inner core of the cluster
  • Strongly variability over the 90 min observation
  • None of the 12 reported pulsars in this area has position compatible with the radio source
  • Association with the IGR suggested even if radio detection puzzling given the onset of thermonuclear bursts subsequent to the radio observation.
Pallanca et al. (2013) ATel 5003 See also Cohn et al. 2013 ATel 5031:
  • HST observations of the field at 3 different epochs
  • Possible optical counterpart => Main sequence star with unexpectedly large variations
  • Source at 2.5σ from Swift, consistent with ATCA and a Chandra source (source 23 in Becker et al. 2003, ApJ, 594, 798)
  • Variability during each observations
Homan et al. (2013) ATel 5045:
  • Chandra ACIS-S observation
  • 1 single source within 0.5" ATCA error circle=> source 23 from Becker et al. 2003, ApJ, 594, 798
  • Fit with absorbed power law => NH~ 1.8e21cm-2 Γ~1.52, with an obtained flux significantly higher than that of source 23 in Becker et al. 2003
Patruno (2013) ATel 5068:
  • Detection of burst oscillations at a frequency of 254.4 Hz
  • Burst oscillations observed by Swift/XRT during a thermonuclear (type I) burst
Papitto et al. (2013) ATel 5069:
  • Radio monitoring with GBT at 2 GHz and Parkes and WSRT at 1.4 GHz
  • Radio pulsar detected sporadically by each telescope
  • Non detection of the source at orb phase 0.25 probably due to eclipsing
  • => These systems switch back and forth between accreting binary and radio pulsar, on short time scales
Pallanca et al. (2013, ApJ) (Source wrongly named)
  • Identification of otpical counterpart
  • Multi epoch HST observations => detection during quiescent and outburst state
  • Quiescence => unperturbed main sequence star
  • Active=> Hα excess suggest active accretion
Papitto et al. (2013, Nature) & Ferrigno et al. (2014, A&A)
  • IGR source and PSR 1824-2425I (in cluster M28) have identical ephemerides => sources associated
  • Pulsations in IGR not powered by rotation of B field (as in the radio pulsar)
  • IGR compatible with X-ray accreting ms pulsar
  • XMM observations => rapid switch between low and high intensity sates (factor of 100 variations on ~s times scales)
  • => transition between accretion and rotation powered regimes.

Last updated 24 July 2014

Jerome Rodriguez