The detection of a short hard X-ray burst and an associated bright soft X-ray source by the Swift satellite in 2020 October heralded a new magnetar in outburst, SGR J1830-0645. Pulsations at a period of ∼10.4 s were detected in prompt follow-up X-ray observations. We present here the analysis of the Swift/Burst Alert Telescope burst, of XMM-Newton and the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array observations performed at the outburst peak, and of a Swift/X-ray Telescope monitoring campaign over the subsequent month. The burst was single-peaked, lasted ∼6 ms, and released a fluence of ≈ 5 × 10-9 erg cm-2 (15-50 keV). The spectrum of the X-ray source at the outburst peak was well described by an absorbed double-blackbody model plus a power-law component detectable up to ∼25 keV. The unabsorbed X-ray flux decreased from ∼5 × 10-11 to ∼2.5 × 10-11 erg cm-2 s-1 one month later (0.3-10 keV). Based on our timing analysis, we estimate a dipolar magnetic field ≈5.5 × 1014 G at pole, a spin-down luminosity ≈2.4 × 1032 erg s-1, and a characteristic age ≈24 kyr. The spin modulation pattern appears highly pulsed in the soft X-ray band, and becomes smoother at higher energies. Several short X-ray bursts were detected during our campaign. No evidence for periodic or single-pulse emission was found at radio frequencies in observations performed with the Sardinia Radio Telescope and Parkes. According to magneto-thermal evolutionary models, the real age of SGR J1830-0645 is close to the characteristic age, and the dipolar magnetic field at birth was slightly larger, ∼1015 G.
This research is based on observations with XMM-Newton (ESA/NASA), NuSTAR (CalTech/NASA/ JPL), and Swift (NASA/ASI/UKSA) and on data retrieved through the NASA/GSFCʼs HEASARC archives. The Sardinia Radio Telescope is funded by the Italian MIUR, ASI, and the Autonomous Region of Sardinia, and is operated as a National Facility by INAF. We used data collected at the Parkes radio telescope (proposal No. P1083), part of the Australia Telescope National Facility which is funded by the Australian Government for operation as a National Facility managed by CSIRO. We acknowledge the Wiradjuri people as the traditional owners of the Observatory site. F.C.Z. and A.B. are supported by Juan de la Cierva fellowships. F.C.Z., A.B., N.R., C.D., and D.V. are supported by the ERC Consolidator Grant “MAGNESIA” (No. 817661) and acknowledge funding from grants SGR2017- 1383 and PGC2018-095512-BI00. G.L.I., P.E., R.T., and A.T. acknowledge financial support from the Italian MIUR through PRIN grant 2017LJ39LM. G.L.I. also acknowledges funding from ASI-INAF agreements I/037/12/0 and 2017-14-H.O. M.B., A.P., and A.R. acknowledge financial support from the research grant “iPeska” (PI: A. Possenti) funded under the INAF national call PRIN-SKA/CTA with Presidential Decree 70/2016. A.R. acknowledges continuing valuable support from the Max-Planck Society. We acknowledge the support of the PHAROS COST Action (CA16214).