A four-year baseline Swift study of enigmatic X-ray transients located near the Galactic center
N. Degenaar, R. Wijnands

TL;DR
This four-year Swift study of X-ray transients near the Galactic center reveals their long-term activity patterns, outburst behaviors, and spectral properties, providing new insights into their accretion processes and recurrence times.
Contribution
The paper presents the first long-term monitoring of these transients, documenting their activity cycles, spectral characteristics, and record-breaking outburst luminosities, advancing understanding of faint X-ray transients.
Findings
GRS 1741-2853 had its brightest outburst ever recorded.
XMM J174457-2850.3 shows short episodes of activity between quiescence and outburst.
Recurrent outbursts of GRS 1741-2853 occur approximately every 2 years.
Abstract
We report on continued monitoring observations of the Galactic center carried out by the X-ray telescope aboard the Swift satellite in 2008 and 2009. This campaign revealed activity of the five known X-ray transients AX J1745.6-2901, CXOGC J174535.5-290124, GRS 1741-2853, XMM J174457-2850.3 and CXOGC J174538.0-290022. All these sources are known to undergo very faint X-ray outbursts with 2-10 keV peak luminosities of Lx,peak~1E34-1E36 erg/s, although the two confirmed neutron star low-mass X-ray binaries AX J1745.6-2901 and GRS 1741-2853 can also become brighter (Lx,peak~1E36-1E37 erg/s). We discuss the observed long-term lightcurves and X-ray spectra of these five enigmatic transients. In 2008, AX J1745.6-2901 returned to quiescence following an unusually long accretion outburst of more than 1.5 years. GRS 1741-2853 was active in 2009 and displayed the brightest outburst ever recorded…
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