Long-term luminosity behavior of 14 ultracompact X-ray binaries
L. M. van Haaften, R. Voss, G. Nelemans

TL;DR
This study analyzes the long-term luminosity variability of 14 ultracompact X-ray binaries using RXTE data, revealing that their statistical luminosity behavior is similar regardless of being persistent or transient, and generally aligns with theoretical predictions for short periods.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive long-term variability analysis of UCXBs, comparing observed luminosity distributions with theoretical mass transfer models across different orbital periods.
Findings
All UCXBs show significant variability.
Luminosity behavior is similar for persistent and transient sources.
Systems with periods above 50 min are brighter than predicted unless special conditions apply.
Abstract
Context. X-ray binaries are usually divided in persistent and transient sources. For ultracompact X-ray binaries (UCXBs), the mass transfer rate is expected to be a strong function of orbital period, predicting persistent sources at short periods and transients at long periods. Aims. For 14 UCXBs including two candidates, we investigate the long-term variability and average luminosity with the purpose of learning how often a source can be expected to be visible above a given luminosity, and we compare the derived luminosities with the theoretical predictions. Methods. We use data from the RXTE All-Sky Monitor because of its long-term, unbiased observations. Many UCXBs are faint, i.e., they have a count rate at the noise level for most of the time. Still, information can be extracted from the data, either by using only reliable data points or by combining the bright-end variability…
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