Anomalous X-ray pulsars (AXPs) are an observational manifestation of magnetars—young, isolated, highly magnetized neutron stars. These energetic X-ray pulsars are characterized by slow rotation periods of ~2–12 seconds and large magnetic fields of ~1013–1015 gauss (1 to 100 gigateslas). As of 2017, there were 12 confirmed and 2 candidate AXPs known.[1] The identification of AXPs with magnetars was motivated by their similarity to soft gamma repeaters.

The AXP candidates and their estimated rotation period in seconds, as of 2003, were:
AXP 1E 2259+586 6.98  
AXP 1E 1048-59 6.45  
AXP 4U 0142+61 8.69  
AXP 1RXS 1708-40 11.0  
AXP 1E 1841-045 11.8  
AXP AXJ1844-0258 6.97  
AXP CXJ0110-7211 5.44  
The second, fourth, and last names have been abbreviated.

References

  1. ^ SGR/AXP Online Catalog (An online catalog of SGR/AXP properties maintained by the pulsar group at McGill University)

Sources

External links