Swift/XRT monitoring of the Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient IGR J18483 0311 for an entire orbital period

IGR J18483 0311 is an X‐ray pulsar with transient X‐ray activity, belonging to the new class of High Mass X‐ray Binaries called Supergiant Fast X‐ray Transients. This system is one of the two members of this class, together with IGR J11215‐5952, where both the orbital (18.52 d) and spin period (21 s) are known. We report on the firs t complete monitoring of the X‐ray activity along an entire orbital period of a Supergiant Fast X‐ray Transient. These Swift observations, lasting 28 days, cover more than one entire orbital phase consecutively. They are a unique data-set, which allows us to constrain the different mechanisms proposed to explain the nature of this new class of X‐ray transients. We applied the new clumpy wind model for blue supergiants developed by Ducci et al. (2009), to the observed X‐ray light curve. Assuming an eccentricity of e = 0.4, the X‐ray emission from this source can be explained in terms of the accretion from a spherically symmetric clumpy wind, composed of clumps with different masses, ranging from 10 18 g to 5×10 21 g.

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