Deep NuSTAR and Swift Monitoring Observations of the Magnetar 1E 1841-045

20 May 2015  ·  An Hongjun, Archibald Robert F., Hascoet Romain, Kaspi Victoria M., Beloborodov Andrei M., Archibald Anne M., Beardmore Andy, Boggs Steven E., Christensen Finn E., Craig William W., Gehrels Niel, Hailey Charles J., Harrison Fiona A., Kennea Jamie, Kouveliotou Chryssa, Stern Daniel, Younes George, Zhang William W. ·

We report on a 350-ks NuSTAR observation of the magnetar 1E 1841-045 taken in 2013 September. During the observation, NuSTAR detected six bursts of short duration, with $T_{90}<1$ s. An elevated level of emission tail is detected after the brightest burst, persisting for $\sim$1 ks. The emission showed a power-law decay with a temporal index of 0.5 before returning to the persistent emission level. The long observation also provided detailed phase-resolved spectra of the persistent X-ray emission of the source. By comparing the persistent spectrum with that previously reported, we find that the source hard-band emission has been stable over approximately 10 years. The persistent hard X-ray emission is well fitted by a coronal outflow model, where $e^{+/-}$ pairs in the magnetosphere upscatter thermal X-rays. Our fit of phase-resolved spectra allowed us to estimate the angle between the rotational and magnetic dipole axes of the magnetar, $\alpha_{mag}=0.25$, the twisted magnetic flux, $2.5\times10^{26}\rm \ G\ cm^2$, and the power released in the twisted magnetosphere, $L_j=6\times10^{36}\rm \ erg\ s^{-1}$. Assuming this model for the hard X-ray spectrum, the soft X-ray component is well fit by a two-blackbody model, with the hotter blackbody consistent with the footprint of the twisted magnetic field lines on the star. We also report on the 3-year Swift monitoring observations obtained since 2011 July. The soft X-ray spectrum remained stable during this period, and the timing behavior was noisy, with large timing residuals.

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High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena