The behavior of subluminous X-ray transients near the Galactic center as observed using the X-ray telescope aboard Swift
N. Degenaar, R. Wijnands

TL;DR
This study analyzes seven subluminous X-ray transients near the Galactic center observed with Swift, revealing their properties, duty cycles, and accretion rates, and discussing implications for binary evolution models.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed spectral analysis of these transients, discovering two new systems and estimating their accretion rates, which challenge existing binary evolution theories.
Findings
Detected two new X-ray transient systems.
Estimated low mass-accretion rates challenging current models.
Observed intermediate activity levels between quiescence and outburst.
Abstract
In this paper we report on the spectral analysis of seven X-ray transients, which were found to be active during a monitoring campaign of the Galactic center carried out in 2006 and 2007 using the X-ray telescope aboard the Swift satellite. This campaign detected new outbursts of five known X-ray transients and discovered two new systems. Their 2-10 keV peak luminosities range from 1E34 to 6E36 erg/s. Two of the sources discussed in this paper are confirmed neutron star systems (AX J1745.6-2901 and GRS 1741-2853), while the five others have an unknown nature. We discuss the characteristics of the observed outbursts and the duty cycles of the various systems. Several of the detected transients seem to undergo enhanced X-ray activity with levels intermediate between quiescence and full outburst. We discuss the possibility that the subluminous appearance of the eclipsing X-ray burster AX…
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