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Structures of X-ray emitting magnetic polar regions on neutron stars in X-ray pulsars are studied in a range of the accretion rate, 10$^{17}$ g s$^{-1} sim 10^{18}$ g s$^{-1}$. It is shown that a thin but tall, radiation energy dominated, X-ray emitting polar cone appears at each of the polar regions. The height of the polar cone is several times as large as the neutron star radius. The energy gain due to the gravity of the neutron star in the polar cone exceeds the energy loss due to photon diffusion in the azimuthal direction of the cone, and a significant amount of energy is advected to the neutron star surface. Then, the radiation energy carried with the flow should become so large for the radiation pressure to overcome the magnetic pressure at the bottom of the cone. As a result, the matter should expand in the tangential direction along the neutron star surface, dragging the magnetic lines of force, and form a mound-like structure. The advected energy to the bottom of the cone should finally be radiated away from the surface of the polar mound and the matter should be settled on the neutron star surface there. From such configurations, we can expect an X-ray spectrum composed of a multi-color blackbody spectrum from the polar cone region and a quasi-single blackbody spectrum from the polar mound region. These spectral properties agree with observations. A combination of a fairly sharp pencil beam and a broad fan beam is expected from the polar cone region, while a broad pencil beam is expected from the polar mound region. With these X-ray beam properties, basic patterns of pulse profiles of X-ray pulsars can be explained too.
The Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) presents an exciting new capability for exploring the modulation properties of X-ray emitting neutron stars, including large area, low background, extremely precise absolute event time stamps, su
Interacting binaries in which a white dwarf accretes material from a companion - cataclysmic variables (CVs) in which the mass donor is a Roche-lobe filling star on or near the main sequence, and symbiotic stars in which the mass donor is a late type
X-ray emission from the surface of isolated neutron stars (NSs) has been now observed in a variety of sources. The ubiquitous presence of pulsations clearly indicates that thermal photons either come from a limited area, possibly heated by some exter
We discuss X-ray and gamma-ray emissions from Crab-like pulsars, PSRs~J0537-6910 and~J0540-6919, in Large Magellanic Cloud. Fermi-LAT observations have resolved the gamma-ray emissions from these two pulsars and found the pulsed emissions from PSR~J0
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