The XMM-Newton survey of the Small Magellanic Cloud: A new X-ray view of the symbiotic binary SMC3
R. Sturm, F. Haberl, J. Greiner, W. Pietsch, N. La Palombara, M. Ehle,, M. Gilfanov, A. Udalski, S. Mereghetti, M. Filipovi\'c

TL;DR
This study uses a 20-year X-ray dataset to analyze the variability of the symbiotic binary SMC3 in the Small Magellanic Cloud, exploring mechanisms like wind ionization, scattering, and temperature changes affecting its X-ray emission.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral and temporal analysis of SMC3's X-ray variability, challenging the eclipse hypothesis and proposing alternative explanations involving wind ionization and temperature fluctuations.
Findings
No significant absorption changes during variability.
X-ray spectra better explained by temperature or normalization changes.
Variability possibly caused by wind ionization or temperature fluctuations.
Abstract
The XMM-Newton survey of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) was performed to study the population of X-ray sources in this neighbouring galaxy. During one of the observations, the symbiotic binary SMC3 was found at its highest X-ray luminosity observed until now. In SMC3 wind accretion from a giant donor star onto a white dwarf is believed to cause steady hydrogen burning on the white dwarf surface, making such systems candidates for supernova type Ia progenitors. It was suggested that the X-ray source is eclipsed every ~4.5 years by the companion star and its stellar wind to explain the large X-ray variability seen in ROSAT data. We use the available X-ray data to test this scenario. We present the ~20 year X-ray light curve of SMC3 and study the spectral evolution as seen with XMM-Newton/EPIC-pn to investigate possible scenarios which can reproduce the high X-ray variability. We did not…
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