The 100-month Swift catalogue of supergiant fast X-ray transients I. BAT on-board and transient monitor flares
P. Romano (1), H.A. Krimm (2,3), D.M. Palmer (4), L. Ducci (5), P., Esposito (6), S. Vercellone (1), P.A. Evans (7), C. Guidorzi (8), V. Mangano,, J.A. Kennea (9), S.D. Barthelmy (2), D.N. Burrows (9), N. Gehrels (2) ((1), INAF/IASF-Palermo, (2) NASA/GSFC, (3) USRA, (4) LANL

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive catalogue of over a thousand bright flares from supergiant fast X-ray transients observed by Swift/BAT over 100 months, analyzing their properties, orbital phase distribution, and implications for binary system characteristics.
Contribution
The study provides the first extensive catalogue of BAT flares from SFXTs, including unpublished events, and analyzes their timing and flux distributions relative to orbital phases, revealing trends related to orbital eccentricity.
Findings
Flares are short, bright, and typically last less than a day.
Flares tend to cluster at specific orbital phases, indicating orbital dependence.
Longer orbital periods correlate with more eccentric orbits and flare clustering.
Abstract
We investigate the characteristics of bright flares for a sample of supergiant fast X-ray transients and their relation to the orbital phase. We have retrieved all Swift/BAT Transient Monitor light curves, and collected all detections in excess of from both daily- and orbital-averaged light curves in the time range of 2005-Feb-12 to 2013-May-31. We also considered all on-board detections as recorded in the same time span and selected those within 4 arcmin of each source in our sample and in excess of . We present a catalogue of over a thousand BAT flares from 11 SFXTs, down to 15-150keV fluxes of erg cm s (daily timescale) and erg cm s (orbital timescale, averaging s) and spanning 100 months. The great majority of these flares are unpublished. This population is characterized by short (a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
