4.4 Article

Strong toroidal magnetic fields required by quiescent X-ray emission of magnetars

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NATURE ASTRONOMY
卷 5, 期 2, 页码 -

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NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41550-020-01220-z

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  1. STFC [ST/S000275/1]
  2. STFC [ST/S000275/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Realistic three-dimensional magneto-thermal simulations accurately describe the observed light curves of magnetars with strong toroidal magnetic fields. The strong modulation of thermal X-ray emission in quiescence can be explained by the presence of a strong toroidal magnetic field. This suggests that the surface temperature of magnetars is substantially non-uniform despite the high thermal conductivity of the star's crust.
Realistic three-dimensional magneto-thermal simulations of magnetars with strong, large-scale toroidal magnetic fields accurately describe the observed light curves of 10 out of 19 magnetars in quiescence and allow their rotational orientation to be further constrained. Magnetars are neutron stars (NSs) with extreme magnetic fields(1)of strength 5 x 10(13)-10(15)G. These fields are generated by dynamo action during the proto-NS phase, and are expected to have both poloidal and toroidal components(2-6), although the energy of the toroidal component could be ten times larger(7). Only the poloidal dipolar field can be measured directly, via NS spin-down(8). The magnetic field provides heating and governs how this heat flows through the crust(9). Magnetar thermal X-ray emission in quiescence is modulated with the rotational period of the NS, with a typical pulsed fraction 10-58%, implying that the surface temperature is substantially non-uniform despite the high thermal conductivity of the star's crust. Poloidal dipolar fields cannot explain this large pulsed fraction(10,11). Previous two-dimensional simulations(12,13)have shown that a strong, large-scale toroidal magnetic field pushes a hot region into one hemisphere and increases the pulsed fraction. Here, we report three-dimensional magneto-thermal simulations of magnetars with strong, large-scale toroidal magnetic fields. These models, combined with ray propagation in curved spacetime, accurately describe the observed light curves of 10 out of 19 magnetars in quiescence and allow us to further constrain their rotational orientation. We find that the presence of a strong toroidal magnetic field is enough to explain the strong modulation of thermal X-ray emission in quiescence.

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