Activity from the Be/X-ray binary system V0332+53 during its intermediate-luminosity outburst in 2008
M. D. Caballero-Garcia (1), A. Camero-Arranz (2), M. Ozbey Arabaci, (3), C. Zurita (4,5), J. Suso (6), J. Gutierrez-Soto (7,8), E. Beklen (9), F., Kiaeerad (10,11), R. Garrido (8), R. Hudec (12,1) ((1) CTU-FEL, (2), IEEC-CSIC, (3) Middle East Technical U., (4) IAC

TL;DR
This study characterizes the behavior of the Be/X-ray binary V 0332+53 during its 2008 intermediate-luminosity outburst, combining X-ray and optical data to analyze its spectral, temporal, and accretion properties.
Contribution
It provides the first tentative evidence of cyclotron line energy increase with flux and details the optical mass ejection episodes over several years.
Findings
Detection of a QPO at 227 mHz during low luminosity states
Broad-band X-ray spectrum fitted with standard models and an unknown 10 keV absorption feature
Optical data reveal ongoing mass ejection episodes since 2006
Abstract
Aims: We present a study of the Be/X-ray binary system V 0332+53 with the main goal of characterizing its behavior mainly during the intermediate-luminosity X-ray event on 2008. In addition, we aim to contribute to the understanding of the global behavior of the donor companion by including optical data from our dedicated campaign starting on 2006. Methods: V 0332+53 was observed by RXTE and Swift during the decay of the intermediate-luminosity X-ray outburst of 2008, as well as with Suzaku before the rising of the third normal outburst of the 2010 series. In addition, we present recent data from the Spanish ground-based astronomical observatories of El Teide (Tenerife), Roque de los Muchachos (La Palma), and Sierra Nevada (Granada), and since 2006 from the Turkish TUBITAK National Observatory (Antalya). We have performed temporal analyses to investigate the transient behaviour of this…
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.
