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The strange timing property of X-ray pulsar 1E 1207.4-5209 can be explained by the hypothesis that it is a member of an ultra-compact binary system. This paper confronts the ultra-compact assumption with the observed properties of this pulsar. The gravitational potential well of an ultra-compact binary can enlarge the corotation radius and thus make it possible for accreting material to reach the surface of the NS in the low accretion rate case. Thus the generation of the absorption features should be similar to the case of accreting pulsars. The close equality of the energy loss by fast cooling of the postsupernova neutron star and the energy dissipation needed for a wide binary evolving to an ultra-compact binary demonstrates that the ultra-compact binary may be formed in 10-100yr after the second supernova explosion. Moreover, the ultra-compact binary hypothesis can well explain the the absence of optical counterpart and the observed two black body emissions. We suggest a simple method which can test the binary nature directly with XMM-Newton and Chandra observations. We further predict that the temperature of the two black bodies should vary at different pulse periods.
We present 20 years of timing observations for 1E 1207.4-5209, the central compact object in supernova remnant PKS 1209-51/52, to follow up on our detection of an unexpected timing glitch in its spin-down. Using new XMM-Newton and NICER observations
Since its discovery as a pulsar in 2000, the central compact object (CCO) 1E 1207.4-5209 in the supernova remnant PKS 1209-51/52 had been a stable 0.424 s rotator with an extremely small spin-down rate and weak (Bs ~ 9E10 G) surface dipole magnetic f
The accretion/ejection coupling in accreting black hole binaries has been described by empirical relations between the X-ray/radio and X-ray/optical-infrared luminosities. These correlations were initially supposed to be universal. However, recently
The accretion/ejection coupling in accreting black hole binaries has been described by empirical relations between the X-ray/radio and X-ray/optical-infrared luminosities. These correlations were initially thought to be universal. However, recently m
We present new timing and spectral analyses of PSR J1412+7922 (Calvera) and PSR J1849-0001, which are only seen as pulsars in X-rays, based on observations conducted with the Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER). We obtain updated and s