An alternative hypothesis for the outburst mechanism in Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients: the case of IGR J11215-5952
L. Sidoli (1), P. Romano (2,3), S. Mereghetti (1), A. Paizis (1), S., Vercellone (1), V. Mangano (4), D. Gotz (5) ((1) INAF-IASF Milano, Italy; (2), INAF-OAB Merate; (3) Univ. Milano Bicocca; (4) INAF-IASF Palermo;, (5)CEA-Saclay)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new outburst mechanism for Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients based on observations of IGR J11215-5952, suggesting a second wind component like an equatorial disk influences outburst behavior.
Contribution
It introduces a novel hypothesis involving a second wind component to explain SFXT outbursts, supported by new X-ray observations of IGR J11215-5952.
Findings
Discovery of a second outburst indicating a ~165-day orbital period
Proposal of an equatorial disk wind component as the outburst trigger
Revised orbital period estimate from 329 to ~165 days
Abstract
(ABRIDGED)- The physical mechanism responsible for the short outbursts in a recently recognized class of High Mass X-ray Binaries, the Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients (SFXTs), is still unknown. Two main hypotheses have been proposed to date: the sudden accretion by the compact object of small ejections originating in a clumpy wind from the supergiant donor, or outbursts produced at (or near) the periastron passage in wide and eccentric orbits, in order to explain the low (1E32 erg/s) quiescent emission.Neither proposed mechanisms seem to explain the whole phenomenology of these sources. Here we propose a new explanation for the outburst mechanism, based on new X-ray observations of the unique SFXT known to display periodic outbursts, IGRJ11215-5952. We performed three Target of Opportunity observations with Swift, XMM-Newton and INTEGRAL at the time of the fifth outburst, expected on…
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