Gazing at the ultra-slow magnetar in RCW 103 with NuSTAR and Swift


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We report on a new NuSTAR observation and on the ongoing Swift XRT monitoring campaign of the peculiar source 1E 161348-5055, located at the centre of the supernova remnant RCW 103, which is recovering from its last outburst in June 2016. The X-ray spectrum at the epoch of the NuSTAR observation can be described by either two absorbed blackbodies ($kT_{BB_1}$ ~ 0.5 keV, $kT_{BB_2}$ ~ 1.2 keV) or an absorbed blackbody plus a power law ($kT_{BB_1}$ ~ 0.6 keV, $Gamma$ ~ 3.9). The observed flux was ~ 9 $times$ 10$^{-12}$ erg s$^{-1}$ cm$^{-2}$, ~ 3 times lower than what observed at the outburst onset, but about one order of magnitude higher than the historical quiescent level. A periodic modulation was detected at the known 6.67 hr periodicity. The spectral decomposition and evolution along the outburst decay are consistent with 1E 161348-5055 being a magnetar, the slowest ever detected.

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