Monitoring Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients with Swift. Results from the first year
P. Romano (1), L. Sidoli (2), G. Cusumano, V. La Parola, S. Vercellone, (1), C. Pagani (3), L. Ducci (4,2), V. Mangano (1), J. Cummings (5), H.A., Krimm (5,6), C. Guidorzi (7), J.A. Kennea, E.A. Hoversten, D.N. Burrows (3),, N. Gehrels (5) ((1) INAF-IASF Palermo

TL;DR
This study presents the first year of systematic Swift monitoring of four Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients, revealing their activity states, duty cycles, and spectral characteristics, demonstrating continuous matter accretion and diverse outburst behaviors.
Contribution
First comprehensive monitoring of four SFXTs with Swift, providing detailed duty cycles, outburst durations, and spectral analysis, advancing understanding of their accretion behavior.
Findings
Duty cycles of inactivity range from 17% to 55%.
Outburst durations exceed hours with multiple peaks.
Spectral fits indicate emission from small neutron star surface regions.
Abstract
Swift has allowed the possibility to give Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients (SFXTs), the new class of High Mass X-ray Binaries discovered by INTEGRAL, non serendipitous attention throughout all phases of their life. We present our results based on the first year of intense Swift monitoring of four SFXTs, IGR J16479-4514, XTE J1739-302, IGR J17544-2619 and AX J1841.0-0536. We obtain the first assessment of how long each source spends in each state using a systematic monitoring with a sensitive instrument. The duty-cycle of inactivity is 17, 28, 39, 55% (5% uncertainty), for IGR J16479-4514, AX J1841.0-0536, XTE J1739-302, and IGR J17544-2619, respectively, so that true quiescence is a rare state. This demonstrates that these transients accrete matter throughout their life at different rates. AX J1841.0-0536 is the only source which has not undergone a bright outburst during our campaign.…
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