Population synthesis of classical low-mass X-ray binaries in the Galactic Bulge
L. M. van Haaften, G. Nelemans, R. Voss, M. V. van der Sluys, S., Toonen

TL;DR
This study models the current population of classical low-mass X-ray binaries in the Galactic Bulge, predicting their numbers, luminosities, and evolutionary states, and compares these with observed populations and ultracompact X-ray binaries.
Contribution
It combines binary population synthesis with detailed evolutionary tracks to estimate the present-day LMXB population and their properties in the Galactic Bulge, including transient and persistent sources.
Findings
Approximately 2,100 LMXBs with neutron star accretors predicted
15-40 are expected to be persistent sources with luminosities >10^35 erg/s
7-20 transient sources are in outburst at any time
Abstract
Aims. We model the present-day population of 'classical' low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) with neutron star accretors, which have hydrogen-rich donor stars. Their population is compared with that of hydrogen-deficient LMXBs, known as ultracompact X-ray binaries (UCXBs). We model the observable LMXB population and compare it to observations. Methods. We combine the binary population synthesis code SeBa with detailed LMXB evolutionary tracks to model the size and properties of the present-day LMXB population in the Galactic Bulge. Whether sources are persistent or transient, and what their instantaneous X-ray luminosities are, is predicted using the thermal-viscous disk instability model. Results. We find a population of ~2.1 x 10^3 LMXBs with neutron star accretors. Of these about 15 - 40 are expected to be persistent (depending on model assumptions), with luminosities higher than 10^35…
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