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The long-stable hard state of XTE J1752-223 and the disk truncation dilemma

Authors :
Connors, Riley M. T.
Garcia, Javier A.
Tomsick, John
Mastroserio, Guglielmo
Grinberg, Victoria
Steiner, James F.
Jiang, Jiachen
Fabian, Andrew C.
Parker, Michael L.
Harrison, Fiona
Hare, Jeremy
Mallick, Labani
Lazar, Hadar
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The degree to which the thin accretion disks of black hole X-ray binaries are truncated during hard spectral states remains a contentious open question in black hole astrophysics. During its singular observed outburst in $2009\mbox{--}2010$, the black hole X-ray binary XTE J1752-223 spent $\sim1$~month in a long-stable hard spectral state at a luminosity of $\sim0.02\mbox{--}0.1~L_{\rm Edd}$. It was observed with 56 RXTE pointings during this period, with simultaneous Swift-XRT daily coverage during the first 10 days of the RXTE observations. Whilst reflection modeling has been extensively explored in the analysis of these data, there is a disagreement surrounding the geometry of the accretion disk and corona implied by the reflection features. We re-examine the combined, high signal-to-noise, simultaneous Swift and RXTE observations, and perform extensive reflection modeling with the latest relxill suite of reflection models, including newer high disk density models. We show that reflection modeling requires that the disk be within $\sim5~R_{\rm ISCO}$ during the hard spectral state, whilst weaker constraints from the thermal disk emission imply higher truncation ($R_{\rm in}=6\mbox{--}80~R_{\rm ISCO}$). We also explore more complex coronal continuum models, allowing for two Comptonization components instead of one, and show that the reflection features still require only a mildly truncated disk. Finally we present a full comparison of our results to previous constraints found from analyses of the same dataset.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, accepted by ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.06567
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac7ff2