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Coalescences of neutron stars and white dwarfs are relatively frequent phenomena, outnumbering other types of compact object mergers (neutron stars and black holes without involving white dwarfs) altogether. Such event potentially can produce not only optical, but also an X-ray burst. Transient source CDF-S XT2 [1] can be an example of this type of events as suggested by [2]. In this note we estimate the rate of these transients in the field of view of X-ray instruments on-board Spectrum-RG satellite. We demonstrate that during four years of the survey program several thousand of events related to neutron star - white dwarf mergers might appear in the field of view of eROSITA. Collimation of X-ray emission can reduce this number. Smaller, but comparable number of transients is expected in the case of ART-XC telescope. However, due to relatively short duration - $lesssim 10^4$ s, - mostly such transients might be visible just in one scan of telescopes ($sim 40$ s), and so only a few photons are expected to be detected which makes definite identification without additional information very problematic.
We report the discovery of three previously unknown cataclysmic variables in the data of the first year of the all-sky X-ray survey by the SRG orbital observatory. The sources were selected due to their brightness in the 4--12 keV band in the data of
VLBI and JVLA observations revealed that GW170817 involved a narrow jet ($ theta_j approx 4^circ $) that dominated the afterglow peak at our viewing angle, $ theta_{rm obs} approx 20^circ $. This implies that at the time of the afterglow peak, the ob
We investigate the effects of mass transfer and gravitational wave (GW) radiation on the orbital evolution of contact neutron-star-white-dwarf (NS-WD) binaries, and the detectability of these binaries by space GW detectors (e.g., Laser Interferometer
ART-XC (Astronomical Roentgen Telescope - X-ray Concentrator) is the hard X-ray instrument with grazing incidence imaging optics on board the Spektr-Roentgen-Gamma (SRG) observatory. The SRG observatory is the flagship astrophysical mission of the Ru
We report on the results of a 4-year timing campaign of PSR~J2222$-0137$, a 2.44-day binary pulsar with a massive white dwarf (WD) companion, with the Nanc{c}ay, Effelsberg and Lovell radio telescopes. Using the Shapiro delay for this system, we find