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Swift J0243.6+6124 was discovered during a giant X-ray outburst in October 2017. While there are numerous studies in the X-ray band, very little is known about the optical counterpart. We have performed an spectral and photometric analysis of the optical counterpart of this intriguing source. We find that the optical counterpart to Swift J0243.6+6124 is a V = 12.9, O9.5Ve star, located at a distance of $sim5$ kpc. The optical extinction in the direction of the source is $A_V=3.6$ mag. The rotational velocity of the O-type star is 210 km s$^{-1}$. The long-term optical variability agrees with the growth and subsequent dissipation of the Be circumstellar disk after the giant X-ray outburst. The optical and X-ray luminosity are strongly correlated during the outburst, suggesting a common origin. We did not detect short-term periodic variability that could be associated with nonradial pulsations from the Be star photosphere.
We report on analysis of observations of the bright transient X-ray pulsar src obtained during its 2017-2018 giant outburst with Insight-HXMT, emph{NuSTAR}, and textit{Swift} observatories. We focus on the discovery of a sharp state transition of the
SwiftJ0243.6+6124, the first Galactic ultra-luminous X-ray pulsar, was observed during its 2017-2018 outburst with emph{AstroSat} at both sub- and super-Eddington levels of accretionwith X-ray luminosities of $L_{X}{sim}7{times}10^{37}$ and $6{times}
The recently discovered neutron star transient Swift J0243.6+6124 has been monitored by {it the Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope} ({it Insight-rm HXMT). Based on the obtained data, we investigate the broadband spectrum of the source throughout the out
We present a spectral study of the ultraluminous Be/X-ray transient pulsar Swift J0243.6+6124 using Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) observations during the systems 2017--2018 giant outburst. The 1.2--10~keV energy spectrum of the s
Swift J0243.6+6124 is a newly discovered Galactic Be/X-ray binary, revealed in late September 2017 in a giant outburst with a peak luminosity of 2E+39 (d/7 kpc)^2 erg/s (0.1-10 keV), with no formerly reported activity. At this luminosity, Swift J0243