Bursting behavior of the Galactic Center faint X-ray transient GRS 1741.9-2853
G. Trap, M. Falanga, A. Goldwurm, E. Bozzo, R. Terrier, P. Ferrando,, D. Porquet, N. Grosso, M. Sakano

TL;DR
This study investigates the bursting behavior and persistent emission of the faint, transient neutron star low-mass X-ray binary GRS 1741.9-2853 near the Galactic Center, revealing its burst properties and accretion dynamics.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of GRS 1741.9-2853's bursts and persistent emission using multiple observatories, providing insights into its nuclear burning regimes at low accretion rates.
Findings
Discovered 11 type-I bursts from GRS 1741.9-2853.
Persistent luminosity varied between 1.7 and 10.5 x 10^36 erg/s.
Bursts suggest pure helium explosions igniting at specific column depths.
Abstract
The neutron star low-mass X-ray binary GRS 1741.9-2853 is a known type-I burster of the Galactic Center. It is transient, faint, and located in a very crowded region, only 10 arcmin from the supermassive black hole Sgr A*. Therefore, its bursting behavior has been poorly studied so far. In particular, its persistent emission has rarely been detected between consecutive bursts, due to lack of sensitivity or confusion. This is what made GRS 1741.9-2853 one of the nine "burst-only sources" identified by BeppoSAX a few years ago. The physical properties of GRS 1741.9-2853 bursts are yet of great interest since we know very little about the nuclear regimes at stake in low accretion rate bursters. We examine here for the first time several bursts in relation with the persistent emission of the source, using INTEGRAL, XMM-Newton, and Swift observations. We investigate the source flux…
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