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Two accretion columns have been argued to form over the surface of a newborn millisecond magnetar for an extremely high accretion rate $gtrsim1.8times10^{-2}M_odot {rm s^{-1}}$ that may occur in the core-collapse of a massive star. In this paper, we investigate the characteristics of these accretion columns and their gravitational wave (GW) radiation. For a typical millisecond magnetar (surface magnetic field strength $Bsim10^{15}$ G and initial spin period $Psim1$ ms), we find (1) its accretion columns are cooled via neutrinos and can reach a height $sim1$ km over the stellar surface; (2) its column-induced characteristic GW strain is comparable to the sensitivities of the next generation ground-based GW detectors within a horizon $sim1$ Mpc; (3) the magnetar can survive only a few tens of seconds; (4) during the survival timescale, the height of the accretion columns increases rapidly to the peak and subsequently decreases slowly; (5) the column mass, characteristic GW strain, and maximum GW luminosity have simultaneous peaks in a similar rise-fall evolution. In addition, we find that the magnetars spin evolution is dominated by the column accretion torque. A possible association with failed supernova is also discussed.
Two classes of X-ray/$gamma$-ray sources, the Soft Gamma Repeaters and the Anomalous X-ray Pulsars have been identified with isolated, slowly spinning magnetars, neutron stars whose emission draws energy from their extremely strong magnetic field ($s
In this paper, we revisit the scenario that an internal gradual magnetic dissipation takes place within the wind from a newborn millisecond magnetar can be responsible for gamma-ray burst production. We show that a combination of two emission compone
The fastest-spinning neutron stars in low-mass X-ray binaries, despite having undergone millions of years of accretion, have been observed to spin well below the Keplerian break-up frequency. We simulate the spin evolution of synthetic populations of
Accreting Millisecond X-Ray Pulsars (AMXPs) are astrophysical laboratories without parallel in the study of extreme physics. In this chapter we review the past fifteen years of discoveries in the field. We summarize the observations of the fifteen kn
In the last 25 years, a new generation of X-ray satellites imparted a significant leap forward in our knowledge of X-ray pulsars. The discovery of accreting and transitional millisecond pulsars proved that disk accretion can spin up a neutron star to