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An evolutionary scenario to explain the transient nature and short total duration of the X-ray burst of SAX J1808.4 -- 3658 is proposed. An optical companion of the neutron star (a ``turn-off Main - Sequence star) fills its Roche lobe at the orbital period ($P_{orb}$) $sim$ 19 hours. During the initial high mass--transfer phase when the neutron star is a persistent X-ray source, the neutron star is spun up to a millisecond period. Due to its chemical composition gradient, the secondary does not become fully convective when its mass decreases below 0.3 $msun$, hence a magnetic braking remains an effective mechanism to remove orbital angular momentum and the system evolves with Roche - lobe overflow towards a short orbital period. Near an orbital period of two hours the mass transfer rate becomes so small ($sim$ $10^{-11}msun$/yr) that the system can not continue to be observed as a persistent X-ray source. During further Roche - lobe filling evolution deep mixing allows the surface of secondary to become more and more helium rich. Since the accreted matter is helium rich, it is easy to explain observed short total duration of the burst . This evolutionary picture suggest that radio emission can be observed only at shorter wavelengths. Our model predicts a faster orbital period decay than expected if the orbital evolution is driven only by gravitational wave radiation.
Low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) are a natural workbench to study accretion disk phenomena and optimal background sources to measure elemental abundances in the Interstellar medium (ISM). In high-resolution XMM-Newton spectra, the LMXB SAX J1808.4-365
We report the detection of a possible gamma-ray counterpart of the accreting millisecond pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658. The analysis of ~6 years of data from the Large Area Telescope on board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (Fermi-LAT) within a region
Observations of the accretion powered millisecond pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658 have revealed an interesting binary evolution, with the orbit of the system expanding at an accelerated rate. We use the recent finding that the accreted fuel in SAX J1808.4-36
During the September-October 2008 outburst of the accreting millisecond pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658, the source was observed by both Suzaku and XMM-Newton approximately 1 day apart. Spectral analysis reveals a broad relativistic Fe K-alpha emission line
We perform phase-resolved spectroscopy of the accreting millisecond pulsar, SAX J1808.4-3658, during the slow-decay phase of the 2002 outburst. Simple phenomenological fits to RXTE PCA data reveal a pulsation in the iron line at the spin frequency of