Evidence for accretion rate change during type I X-ray bursts
Hauke Worpel, Duncan K. Galloway, Daniel J. Price

TL;DR
This study reanalyzed 332 X-ray bursts, introducing a variable factor for persistent emission, revealing that accretion rates increase during bursts and improving spectral fit quality.
Contribution
We developed a modified spectral analysis method incorporating a variable persistent emission factor, revealing accretion rate changes during X-ray bursts.
Findings
Persistent emission typically increases during bursts.
Elevated $f_a$ correlates inversely with persistent flux.
Modified model yields better spectral fits.
Abstract
The standard approach for time-resolved X-ray spectral analysis of thermonuclear bursts involves subtraction of the pre-burst emission as background. This approach implicitly assumes that the persistent flux remains constant throughout the burst. We reanalyzed 332 photospheric radius expansion bursts observed from 40 sources by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer, introducing a multiplicative factor to the persistent emission contribution in our spectral fits. We found that for the majority of spectra the best-fit value of is significantly greater than 1, suggesting that the persistent emission typically increases during a burst. Elevated values were not found solely during the radius expansion interval of the burst, but were also measured in the cooling tail. The modified model results in a lower average value of the fit statistic, indicating superior spectral…
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