Two years of monitoring Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients with Swift
P. Romano, V. La Parola, S. Vercellone, G. Cusumano (1), L. Sidoli, (2), H.A. Krimm (3,4), C. Pagani (5,6), P. Esposito (7,8), E.A. Hoversten, (5), J.A. Kennea (5), K.L. Page (6), D.N. Burrows (5), N.Gehrels (4) ((1), INAF/IASF-Palermo, (2) INAF/IASF-Milano, (3) NASA/GSFC

TL;DR
This study presents two years of Swift observations of three Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients, revealing their persistent activity, variability, and accretion behavior, with implications for understanding their accretion processes and duty cycles.
Contribution
First systematic long-term monitoring of SFXTs with Swift, providing detailed insights into their activity, spectral properties, and accretion dynamics over two years.
Findings
SFXTs spend only 3-5% of time in bright outbursts.
Their typical flux is 1-2E-11 erg cm^{-2} s^{-1}, much lower than outbursts.
Inactivity duty cycle varies from 19% to 55%.
Abstract
We present two years of intense Swift monitoring of three SFXTs, IGR J16479-4514, XTE J1739-302, and IGR J17544-2619 (since October 2007). Out-of-outburst intensity-based X-ray (0.3-10keV) spectroscopy yields absorbed power laws with by hard photon indices (G~1-2). Their outburst broad-band (0.3-150 keV) spectra can be fit well with models typically used to describe the X-ray emission from accreting NSs in HMXBs. We assess how long each source spends in each state using a systematic monitoring with a sensitive instrument. These sources spend 3-5% of the total in bright outbursts. The most probable flux is 1-2E-11 erg cm^{-2} s^{-1} (2-10 keV, unabsorbed), corresponding to luminosities in the order of a few 10^{33} to 10^{34} erg s^{-1} (two orders of magnitude lower than the bright outbursts). The duty-cycle of inactivity is 19, 39, 55%, for IGR J16479-4514, XTE J1739-302, and IGR…
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