Bibcode
Elebert, P.; Reynolds, M. T.; Callanan, P. J.; Hurley, D. J.; Ramsay, G.; Lewis, F.; Russell, D. M.; Nord, B.; Kane, S. R.; Depoy, D. L.; Hakala, P.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 395, Issue 2, pp. 884-894.
Fecha de publicación:
5
2009
Número de citas
84
Número de citas referidas
79
Descripción
We present phase resolved optical spectroscopy and photometry of V4580
Sagittarii, the optical counterpart to the accretion powered millisecond
pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658, obtained during the 2008 September/October
outburst. Doppler tomography of the NIII λ4640.64 Bowen blend
emission line reveals a focused spot of emission at a location
consistent with the secondary star. The velocity of this emission occurs
at 324 +/- 15kms-1 applying a `K-correction', we find the
velocity of the secondary star projected on to the line of sight to be
370 +/- 40kms-1. Based on existing pulse timing measurements,
this constrains the mass ratio of the system to be
0.044+0.005-0.004, and the mass function for the
pulsar to be 0.44+0.16-0.13Msolar.
Combining this mass function with various inclination estimates from
other authors, we find no evidence to suggest that the neutron star in
SAX J1808.4-3658 is more massive than the canonical value of
1.4Msolar. Our optical light curves exhibit a possible
superhump modulation, expected for a system with such a low mass ratio.
The equivalent width of the CaII H and K interstellar absorption lines
suggest that the distance to the source is ~2.5 kpc. This is consistent
with previous distance estimates based on type-I X-ray bursts which
assume cosmic abundances of hydrogen, but lower than more recent
estimates which assume helium-rich bursts.