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Magnetars: a short review and some sparse considerations

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arxiv 1803.05716 v1 pith:4HR3HT74 submitted 2018-03-15 astro-ph.HE

Magnetars: a short review and some sparse considerations

classification astro-ph.HE
keywords magnetarsburstsisolatedneutronsomesourcesstarsthey
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We currently know about 30 magnetars: seemingly isolated neutron stars whose properties can be (in part) comprehended only acknowledging that they are endowed with magnetic fields of complex morphology and exceptional intensity-at least in some components of the field structure. Although magnetars represent only a small percentage of the known isolated neutron stars, there are almost certainly many more of them, since most magnetars were discovered in transitory phases called outbursts, during which they are particularly noticeable. In outburst, in fact, a magnetar can be brighter in X-rays by orders of magnitude and usually emit powerful bursts of hard-X/soft-gamma-ray photons that can be detected almost everywhere in the Galaxy with all-sky monitors such as those on board the Fermi satellite or the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory. Magnetars command great attention because the large progress that has been made in their understanding is proving fundamental to fathom the whole population of isolated neutron stars, and because, due to their extreme properties, they are relevant for a vast range of different astrophysical topics, from the study of gamma-ray bursts and superluminous supernovae, to ultraluminous X-ray sources, fast radio bursts, and even to sources of gravitational waves. Several excellent reviews with different focuses were published on magnetars in the last few years: among others, Israel and Dall'Osso (2011); Rea and Esposito (2011); Turolla and Esposito (2013); Mereghetti et al. (2015); Turolla et al. (2015); Kaspi and Beloborodov (2017). Here, we quickly recall the history of these sources and travel through the main observational facts, trying to touch some recent and sometimes little-discussed ramifications of magnetars.

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Cited by 2 Pith papers

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Thermal and Magnetic effects on Bulk Viscosity in Binary Neutron Star Mergers

    nucl-th 2025-10 unverdicted novelty 7.0

    Magnetic fields modify bulk viscous dissipation in post-merger neutron star matter by altering direct and modified Urca rates at finite temperature beyond the Fermi surface approximation.

  2. The X-ray emission of the long-period transient and accreting cataclysmic variable ASKAP J174508.9-505149

    astro-ph.HE 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    X-ray timing and spectral analysis of ASKAP J174508.9-505149 detects matching periodicity and features consistent with an accreting magnetic CV.