The Accreting Black Hole Swift J1753.5-0127 from Radio to Hard X-Ray
John A. Tomsick (SSL/UCB), Farid Rahoui (ESO, Harvard), Mari, Kolehmainen (Oxford), James Miller-Jones (Curtin University), Felix Fuerst, (Caltech), Kazutaka Yamaoka (Nagoya University), Hiroshi Akitaya (Hiroshima, University), Stephane Corbel (AIM, Observatoire de Paris)

TL;DR
This study presents multi-wavelength observations of the black hole binary Swift J1753.5-0127, revealing detailed disk and jet properties, and suggesting the possible coexistence of inner and truncated accretion disks.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive spectral energy distribution analysis from radio to X-ray, including modeling of the accretion disk, jet emission, and potential inner disk presence in the hard state.
Findings
Radio emission is consistent with optically thick synchrotron from a compact jet.
The X-ray spectrum is well described by a power-law with a photon index of 1.722.
Evidence suggests a possible inner accretion disk component at 3.1-sigma significance.
Abstract
(abridged) We report on multi-wavelength measurements of Swift J1753.5-0127 in the hard state at L=2.7e36 erg/s (assuming d=3 kpc) in 2014. The radio emission is optically thick synchrotron, presumably from a compact jet. We take advantage of the low extinction and model the near-IR to UV emission with a multi-temperature disk model. Assuming a BH mass of M_BH=5 Msun and a system inclination of 40 deg, the fits imply an inner radius for the disk of Rin/Rg>212 d_3 (5Msun/M_BH). The outer radius is R_out/R_g=90,000 d_3 (5Msun/M_BH), which corresponds to 6.6e10 d_3 cm, consistent with the expected size of the disk. The 0.5-240 keV spectrum measured by Swift/XRT, Suzaku, and NuSTAR is relatively well characterized by a power-law with a photon index of Gamma=1.722+/-0.003, but a significant improvement is seen when a second continuum component is added. Reflection is a possibility, but no…
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