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We calculate the pulsed fraction (PF) of the super-critical column accretion flows onto magnetized neutron stars (NSs), of which the magnetic axis is misaligned with the rotation axis, based on the simulation results by Kawashima et al.(2016, PASJ, 68, 83). Here, we solve the geodesic equation for light in the Schwarzschild spacetime in order to take into account the light bending effect. The gravitational redshift and the relativistic doppler effect from gas motions of the accretion columns are also incorporated. The pulsed emission appears since the observed luminosity, which exceeds the Eddington luminosity for the stellar-mass black holes, periodically changes via precession of the column caused by the rotation of the NS. The PF tends to increase as $theta_{rm obs}$ approaching to $theta_{rm B}$, where $theta_{rm obs}$ and $theta_{rm B}$ are the observers viewing angle and the polar angle of the magnetic axis measured from the rotation axis. The maximum PF is around 50 %. Also, we find that the PF becomes less than 5 % for $theta_{rm obs} lesssim 5^circ$ or for $theta_{rm B} lesssim 5^circ$. Our results are consistent with observations of ultraluminous X-ray pulsars (ULXPs) with few exceptions, since the ULXPs mostly exhibit the PF of $lesssim$ 50 %. Our present study supports the hypothesis that the ULXPs are powered by the super-critical column accretion onto NSs.
We study properties of luminous X-ray pulsars using a simplified model of the accretion column. The maximal possible luminosity is calculated as a function of the neutron star (NS) magnetic field and spin period. It is shown that the luminosity can r
We present a detailed, broadband X-ray spectral analysis of the ULX pulsar NGC 7793 P13, a known super-Eddington source, utilizing data from the $XMM$-$Newton$, $NuSTAR$ and $Chandra$ observatories. The broadband $XMM$-$Newton+NuSTAR$ spectrum of P13
Studying the physical processes occurring in the region just above the magnetic poles of strongly magnetized, accreting binary neutron stars is essential to our understanding of stellar and binary system evolution. Perhaps more importantly, it provid
Some thermonuclear (type I) X-ray bursts at the neutron star surfaces in low-mass X-ray binaries take place during hard persistent states of the systems. Spectral evolution of these bursts is well described by the atmosphere model of a passively cool
The classical limit on the accretion luminosity of a neutron star is given by the Eddington luminosity. The advanced models of accretion onto magnetized neutron stars account for the appearance of magnetically confined accretion columns and allow the