The enigmatic black-hole candidate and X-ray transient IGR J17091-3624 in its quiescent state as seen with XMM-Newton
Rudy Wijnands, Yi Jung Yang, and Diego Altamirano

TL;DR
This study presents XMM-Newton observations of the black hole candidate IGR J17091-3624 in quiescence, revealing variability in flux and discussing implications for its orbital period and extreme X-ray variability.
Contribution
First X-ray observations of IGR J17091-3624 in quiescence, analyzing flux variability and estimating orbital period implications based on luminosity relations.
Findings
Source detected during quiescence with luminosity ~10^{33} erg/s
Flux increased by several tens of percent between observations
Estimated orbital period >100 hours or possibly much longer
Abstract
We report on two short XMM-Newton observations performed in August 2006 and February 2007 during the quiescence state of the enigmatic black hole candidate system IGR J17091-3624. During both observations the source was clearly detected. Although the errors on the estimated fluxes are large, the source appears to be brighter by several tens of percents during the February 2007 observation compared to the August 2006 observation. During both observations the 2-10 keV luminosity of the source was close to ~10^{33} erg/s for an assumed distance of 10 kpc. However, we note that the distance to this source is not well constrained and it has been suggested it might be as far as 35 kpc which would result in an order of magnitude higher luminosities. If the empirically found relation between the orbital period and the quiescence luminosity of black hole transients is also valid for IGR…
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