NICER Discovery of Millisecond X-Ray Pulsations and an Ultracompact Orbit in IGR J17494-3030
Chakrabarty, Deepto; Ray, Paul S.; Wolff, Michael T.; Arzoumanian, Zaven; Kerr, Matthew; Güver, Tolga; Altamirano, Diego; Jaisawal, Gaurava K.; Gendreau, Keith C.; Bult, Peter; Malacaria, Christian; Ng, Mason; Strohmayer, Tod E.; Wadiasingh, Zorawar
United States, Denmark, United Kingdom, Turkey, South Africa
Abstract
We report the detection of 376.05 Hz (2.66 ms) coherent X-ray pulsations in NICER observations of a transient outburst of the low-mass X-ray binary IGR J17494-3030 in 2020 October/November. The system is an accreting millisecond X-ray pulsar in a 75-minute ultracompact binary. The mass donor is most likely a ≃0.02 M⊙ finite-entropy white dwarf composed of He or C/O. The fractional rms pulsed amplitude is 7.4%, and the soft (1-3 keV) X-ray pulse profile contains a significant second harmonic. The pulsed amplitude and pulse phase lag (relative to our mean timing model) are energy dependent, each having a local maximum at 4 and 1.5 keV, respectively. We also recovered the X-ray pulsations in archival 2012 XMM-Newton observations, allowing us to measure a long-term pulsar spin-down rate of $\dot{\nu }=-2.1(7)\times {10}^{-14}$ Hz s-1 and to infer a pulsar surface dipole magnetic field strength of ≃109 G. We show that the mass transfer in the binary is likely nonconservative, and we discuss various scenarios for mass loss from the system.