MAXI J1659-152: The shortest orbital period black-hole transient in outburst
E. Kuulkers, C. Kouveliotou, T. Belloni, M. Cadolle Bel, J. Chenevez,, M. Diaz Trigo, J. Homan, A. Ibarra, J.A. Kennea, T. Munoz-Darias, J.-U. Ness,, A.N. Parmar, A.M.T. Pollock, E.P.J. van den Heuvel, A.J. van der Horst

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of MAXI J1659-152 as the shortest orbital period black-hole binary, analyzing multi-instrument observations to determine its properties, orbital period, and potential evolutionary history.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of the shortest period black-hole binary, including orbital period, system inclination, companion star properties, and its likely origin in the Galactic halo.
Findings
Orbital period of 2.414 hours, shortest for black-hole binaries.
Companion star estimated as an M5 dwarf with 0.15-0.25 M_sun.
System located at 8.6 kpc, high Galactic scale height.
Abstract
MAXI J1659-152 is a bright X-ray transient black-hole candidate binary system discovered in September 2010. We report here on MAXI, RXTE, Swift, and XMM-Newton observations during its 2010/2011 outburst. We find that during the first one and a half week of the outburst the X-ray light curves display drops in intensity at regular intervals, which we interpret as absorption dips. About three weeks into the outbursts, again drops in intensity are seen. These dips have, however, a spectral behaviour opposite to that of the absorption dips, and are related to fast spectral state changes (hence referred to as transition dips). The absorption dips recur with a period of 2.414+/-0.005 hrs, which we interpret as the orbital period of the system. This implies that MAXI J1659-152 is the shortest period black-hole candidate binary known to date. The inclination of the accretion disk with respect to…
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