X-ray, UV, and optical observations of the accretion disk and boundary layer in the symbiotic star RT Cru
G. J. M. Luna, K. Mukai, J. L. Sokoloski, A. B. Lucy, G. Cusumano, A., Segreto, M. Jaque Arancibia, N. E. Nu\~nez, R. E. Puebla, T. Nelson, and, F.Walter

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength observations to analyze accretion processes in the symbiotic star RT Cru, revealing a non-magnetic, disk-mediated accretion onto a white dwarf with an optically thin boundary layer during brightening events.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence that accretion in RT Cru occurs through a non-magnetic, optically thin boundary layer, challenging previous magnetic accretion models.
Findings
Accretion proceeds via a disk reaching the WD surface.
No evidence of magnetic WD spin modulations.
Boundary layer remains optically thin during brightening.
Abstract
Compared to mass transfer in cataclysmic variables, the nature of accretion in symbiotic binaries in which red giants transfer material to white dwarfs (WDs) has been difficult to uncover. The accretion flows in a symbiotic binary are most clearly observable, however, when there is no quasi-steady shell burning on the WD to hide them. RT Cru is the prototype of such non-burning symbiotics, with its hard ({\delta}-type) X-ray emission providing a view of its innermost accretion structures. In the past 20 yr, RT Cru has experienced two similar optical brightening events, separated by 4000 days and with amplitudes of {\Delta}V 1.5 mag. After Swift became operative, the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) detector revealed a hard X-ray brightening event almost in coincidence with the second optical peak. Spectral and timing analyses of multi-wavelength observations that we describe here, from…
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