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On 2011 July 14, a new magnetar candidate, Swift J1822.3-1606, was identified via a rate trigger on the Swift/Burst Alert Telescope. Here we present an initial analysis of the X-ray properties of the source, using data from the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer, Swift, and the Chandra X-ray Observatory, spanning 2011 July 16--September 22. We measure a precise spin period of P=8.43771963(5) s and a spin-down rate of 2.97(28)E-13, at MJD 55761.0, corresponding to an inferred surface dipole magnetic field strength of B=5.1E13 G, the second lowest thus far measured for a magnetar, though similar to 1E~2259+586 as well as to several high-magnetic field radio pulsars. We show that the pulsed X-ray flux decay in the 2--10 keV band is best fit by an exponential with a time constant of 16.4+/-0.3 days. After increasing from ~35% during the first week after the onset of the outburst, the pulsed fraction in the 2--10 keV band remained constant at ~45. We argue that these properties confirm this source to be a new member of the class of objects known as magnetars.
We report on the long term X-ray monitoring with Swift, RXTE, Suzaku, Chandra and XMM-Newton of the outburst of the newly discovered magnetar Swift J1822.3-1606 (SGR 1822-1606), from the first observations soon after the detection of the short X-ray
We report on 2.4 yr of radio timing measurements of the magnetar PSR J1622$-$4950 using the Parkes telescope, between 2011 November and 2014 March. During this period the torque on the neutron star (inferred from the rotational frequency derivative)
The soft gamma-ray repeater Swift J1555.2-5402 was discovered by means of a 12-ms duration short burst detected with Swift BAT on 2021 June 3. Then 1.6 hours after the first burst detection, NICER started daily monitoring of this X-ray source for a m
We report on the analysis of two deep XMM-Newton observations of the magnetar Swift J1834.9-0846 and its surrounding extended emission taken in March 2014 and October 2014, 2.5 and 3.1 years after the source went into outburst. The magnetar is only w
Swift J1818.0-1607 is a new radio-loud magnetar discovered by the Swift Burst Alert Telescope on 2020 March 12. It has a magnetic field B~2.5e14 G, spin-down luminosity of 7.2e35 ergs/s, and characteristic age of ~470yr. Here we report on the Chandra