Accretion disk signatures in Type I X-ray Bursts: prospects for future missions
L. Keek, Z. Wolf, and D. R. Ballantyne

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the potential of upcoming X-ray observatories to detect and analyze reflection signatures in Type I X-ray bursts, offering new insights into accretion disk physics and burst-disk interactions.
Contribution
It models burst spectra for various parameters and assesses the detectability of reflection features with future missions like NICER, Athena, and LOFT.
Findings
NICER and Athena can detect reflection in bright bursts within seconds.
LOFT's large area could revolutionize understanding of accretion geometry evolution.
Reflection features are sensitive to disk metallicity and density.
Abstract
Type I X-ray bursts and superbursts from accreting neutron stars illuminate the accretion disk and produce a reflection signal that evolves as the burst fades. Examining the evolution of reflection features in the spectra will give insight into the burst-disk interaction, a potentially powerful probe of accretion disk physics. At present, reflection has been observed during only two bursts of exceptional duration. We investigate the detectability of reflection signatures with four of the latest well-studied X-ray observatory concepts: Hitomi, NICER, Athena, and LOFT. Burst spectra are modeled for different values for the flux, temperature, and the disk ionization parameter, which are representative for most known bursts and sources. The effective area and through-put of a Hitomi-like telescope are insufficient for characterizing burst reflection features. NICER and Athena will detect…
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.
