Multiwavelength Observations of A0620-00 in Quiescence
C.S. Froning, A. G. Cantrell, T. J. Maccarone, K. France, J., Khargharia, L. M. Wintr, E. L. Robinson, R. I. Hynes, J. W. Broderick, S., Markoff, M. A. P. Torres, M. Garcia, C. D. Bailyn, J. X. Prochaska, J. Werk,, C. Thom, S. Beland, C. W. Danforth, B. Keeney, and J. C. Green

TL;DR
This study presents the first FUV spectrum of A0620-00 in quiescence, revealing a flat, faint spectrum and complex accretion dynamics, including significant mass loss and outflows, challenging existing accretion models.
Contribution
First FUV spectrum of A0620-00 obtained, revealing new spectral features and insights into accretion processes in quiescent black hole binaries.
Findings
FUV spectrum is flat and very faint.
Optical-UV spectrum peaks at ~3000 Å, fitting a 10,000 K blackbody.
Mass accretion rate at the hot spot is much higher than inferred from X-ray luminosity.
Abstract
[Abridged.] We present multiwavelength observations of the black hole binary system, A0620-00. Using the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope, we have obtained the first FUV spectrum of A0620-00. The observed spectrum is flat in the FUV and very faint (with continuum fluxes \simeq 1e - 17 ergs/cm^2/s/A). We compiled the dereddened, broadband spectral energy distribution of A0620-00 and compared it to previous SEDs as well as theoretical models. The SEDs show that the source varies at all wavelengths for which we have multiple samples. Contrary to previous observations, the optical-UV spectrum does not continue to drop to shorter wavelengths, but instead shows a recovery and an increasingly blue spectrum in the FUV. We created an optical-UV spectrum of A0620-00 with the donor star contribution removed. The non-stellar spectrum peaks at \simeq3000 {\deg}A. The peak…
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