X-ray follow-ups of XSSJ12270-4859: a low-mass X-ray binary with gamma ray FERMI-LAT association
D. de Martino, T. Belloni, M. Falanga, A. Papitto, S. Motta, A., Pellizzoni, Y. Evangelista, G. Piano, N. Masetti, J.-M. Bonnet-Bidaud, M., Mouchet, K. Mukai, A. Possenti

TL;DR
This study investigates XSSJ1227.0-4859, a peculiar low-mass X-ray binary with gamma-ray association, through multi-wavelength observations revealing its stable low luminosity, spectral components, and possible compact object nature.
Contribution
The paper provides the first comprehensive multi-wavelength analysis combining X-ray, gamma-ray, UV, optical, and IR data to characterize XSSJ1227.0-4859 and explore its nature.
Findings
Stable low-luminosity (~6x10^33 erg/s) X-ray emission over 7 years.
Detection of hot (~13kK) and cool (~4.6kK) spectral components.
Evidence suggesting a neutron star or black hole in the binary system.
Abstract
XSSJ1227.0-4859 is a peculiar, hard X-ray source recently positionally associated to the Fermi-LAT source 1FGLJ1227.9-4852/2FGLJ1227.7-4853. Multi-wavelength observations have added information on this source, indicating a low-luminosity low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB), but its nature is still unclear. To progress in our understanding, we present new X-ray data from a monitoring campaign performed in 2011 with the XMM-Newton, RXTE, and Swift satellites and combine them with new gamma-ray data from the Fermi and AGILE satellites. We complement the study with simultaneous near-UV photometry from XMM-Newton and with previous UV/optical and near-IR data. The X-ray history of XSSJ1227.0-4859 over 7yr shows a persistent and rather stable low-luminosity (~6x10^33 d_{1\,kpc}^2 erg/s) source, with flares and dips being peculiar and permanent characteristics. The associated Fermi-LAT source…
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