Published August 1, 2022 | Version public
Journal Article

The Long-stable Hard State of XTE J1752-223 and the Disk Truncation Dilemma

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
  • 3. ROR icon University of California, Berkeley
  • 4. ROR icon European Space Research and Technology Centre
  • 5. ROR icon Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • 6. ROR icon University of Cambridge
  • 7. ROR icon Goddard Space Flight Center

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 2009–2010, the black hole X-ray binary XTE J1752−223 spent ∼1 month in a long-stable hard spectral state at a luminosity of ∼0.02–0.1 L_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. While reflection modeling has been extensively explored in the analysis of these data, there is disagreement surrounding the geometry of the accretion disk and corona implied by the reflection features. We reexamine 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 ∼5 R_ISCO during the hard spectral state, while weaker constraints from the thermal disk emission imply higher truncation (R_in = 6–80 R_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 data set.

Additional Information

J.A.G. acknowledges support from NASA grant NNX15AV31G and from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. R.M.T.C. has been supported by NASA grant 80NSSC177K0515. J.J. acknowledges support from the Leverhulme Trust, the Isaac Newton Trust, and St. Edmund's College, University of Cambridge. J.H. acknowledges support from an appointment to the NASA Postdoctoral Program at the Goddard Space Flight Center, administered by the ORAU through a contract with NASA. This research has made use of data, software, and/or web tools obtained from HEASARC, a service of the Astrophysics Science Division at NASA/GSFC and of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's High Energy Astrophysics Division. This research has made use of ISIS functions (ISISscripts) provided by ECAP/Remeis Observatory and MIT (http://www.sternwarte.uni-erlangen.de/isis/). Facilities: RXTE (PCA: Jahoda et al. 1996; HEXTE: Rothschild et al. 1998), Swift-XRT (Burrows et al. 2005), HEASARC, HEASoft. Software: XSPEC v.12.10.1s (Arnaud 1996), XILLVER (García & Kallman 2010; García et al. 2013), RELXILL (v1.3.11-5dev; García et al. 2014; Dauser et al. 2014).

Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
116617
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20220908-183016086

Funding

NASA ∣ GSFC ∣ Astrophysics Science Division
NNX15AV31G
NASA ∣ GSFC ∣ Astrophysics Science Division
80NSSC177K0515
Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
Leverhulme Trust
Isaac Newton Trust
St. Edmund's College, University of Cambridge
NASA Postdoctoral Program
HEASARC

Dates

Created
2022-09-07
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2022-09-08
Created from EPrint's last_modified field

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Astronomy Department