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Discovery of a 7 Second X-Ray Pulsar, AX J1845.0–0300

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© 1998. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Ken'ichi Torii et al 1998 ApJ 503 843 DOI 10.1086/306038

0004-637X/503/2/843

Abstract

We report here a serendipitous discovery of a faint X-ray pulsar, AX J1845.0-0300, with ASCA. Its period of ~7 s, together with its low luminosity and the soft spectrum, suggest that it may be the eighth candidate member of braking X-ray pulsars. Two observations, 3.5 yr apart, showed a significant flux decrease of more than 1 order of magnitude. The source is in the Scutum arm region (l ~ 30°), which was claimed as a colony of X-ray pulsars by Koyama et al. This discovery strengthens the hypothesis by Koyama et al. that there may be a number of low-luminosity pulsars on the Galactic plane, particularly in the Scutum arm region.

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10.1086/306038