Bibcode
Castro-Tirado, A. J.; de Ugarte Postigo, A.; Gorosabel, J.; Jelínek, M.; Fatkhullin, T. A.; Sokolov, V. V.; Ferrero, P.; Kann, D. A.; Klose, S.; Sluse, D.; Bremer, M.; Winters, J. M.; Nuernberger, D.; Pérez-Ramírez, D.; Guerrero, M. A.; French, J.; Melady, G.; Hanlon, L.; McBreen, B.; Leventis, K.; Markoff, S. B.; Leon, S.; Kraus, A.; Aceituno, F. J.; Cunniffe, R.; Kubánek, P.; Vítek, S.; Schulze, S.; Wilson, A. C.; Hudec, R.; Durant, M.; González-Pérez, J. M.; Shahbaz, T.; Guziy, S.; Pandey, S. B.; Pavlenko, L.; Sonbas, E.; Trushkin, S. A.; Bursov, N. N.; Nizhelskij, N. A.; Sánchez-Fernández, C.; Sabau-Graziati, L.
Bibliographical reference
Nature, Volume 455, Issue 7212, pp. 506-509 (2008).
Advertised on:
9
2008
Journal
Citations
44
Refereed citations
33
Description
Magnetars are young neutron stars with very strong magnetic fields of
the order of 1014-1015G. They are detected in our
Galaxy either as soft γ-ray repeaters or anomalous X-ray pulsars.
Soft γ-ray repeaters are a rare type of γ-ray transient
sources that are occasionally detected as bursters in the high-energy
sky. No optical counterpart to the γ-ray flares or the quiescent
source has yet been identified. Here we report multi-wavelength
observations of a puzzling source, SWIFT J195509+261406. We detected
more than 40 flaring episodes in the optical band over a time span of
three days, and a faint infrared flare 11days later, after which the
source returned to quiescence. Our radio observations confirm a Galactic
nature and establish a lower distance limit of ~3.7kpc. We suggest that
SWIFT J195509+261406 could be an isolated magnetar whose bursting
activity has been detected at optical wavelengths, and for which the
long-term X-ray emission is short-lived. In this case, a new
manifestation of magnetar activity has been recorded and we can consider
SWIFT J195509+261406 to be a link between the `persistent' soft
γ-ray repeaters/anomalous X-ray pulsars and dim isolated neutron
stars.
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Montserrat
Armas Padilla