Detection of X-rays from the jet-driving Symbiotic Star MWC 560
Matthias Stute (1), Raghvendra Sahai (2) ((1) IASA, University of, Athens, (2) Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology)

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of X-ray emission from the jet-driving symbiotic star MWC 560, revealing complex spectral components and variability consistent with accretion onto a white dwarf, and compares it with similar objects.
Contribution
It provides the first X-ray observations of MWC 560, characterizes its spectral components, and discusses implications for accretion processes and jet-related X-ray emission in symbiotic stars.
Findings
Detected hard X-ray component consistent with an optically-thin hot plasma.
Observed a soft X-ray component with lower flux than models predicted.
Found variability on timescales of minutes and hours, but no rapid periodicity.
Abstract
We report the detection of X-ray emission from the jet-driving symbiotic star MWC 560. We observed MWC 560 with XMM-Newton for 36 ks. We fitted the spectra from the EPIC pn, MOS1 and MOS2 instruments with XSPEC and examined the light curves with the package XRONOS. The spectrum can be fitted with a highly absorbed hard X-ray component from an optically-thin hot plasma, a Gaussian emission line with an energy of 6.1 keV and a less absorbed soft thermal component. The best fit is obtained with a model in which the hot component is produced by optically thin thermal emission from an isobaric cooling flow with a maximum temperature of 61 keV, which might be created inside an optically-thin boundary layer on the surface of the accreting with dwarf. The derived parameters of the hard component detected in MWC 560 are in good agreement with similar objects as CH Cyg, SS7317, RT Cru and T CrB,…
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