# Accretion and Outflow in V404 Cyg

**Authors:** J. Casares, T. Mu\~noz-Darias, D. Mata Sanchez, P.A. Charles, M.A.P., Torres, M. Armas Padilla, R.P. Fender, J. Garcia-Rojas

arXiv: 1907.00005 · 2019-07-10

## TL;DR

This study analyzes the 2015 outburst of V404 Cyg, revealing a large wind mass, high wind efficiency, and the role of irradiation and radiation pressure in outburst evolution and decay.

## Contribution

It provides new measurements of wind mass and efficiency, compares outbursts across years, and highlights the impact of irradiation and radiation pressure on outburst dynamics.

## Key findings

- Wind mass ~4x10^{-6} Msun, much larger than accreted mass.
- Wind efficiency exceeds previous estimates, indicating significant radiation pressure.
- Evidence of rapid disc contraction linked to mass transfer bursts.

## Abstract

We study the optical evolution of the 2015 outburst in V404 Cyg, with emphasis on the peculiar nebular phase and subsequent decay to quiescence. From the decay timescale of the Balmer emission associated with the nebula we measure an outflow mass M_wind~4x10^{-6} Msun. Remarkably, this is ~100 times larger than the accreted mass and ~10% of the total mass stored in the disc. The wind efficiency must therefore be significantly larger than previous estimates for black hole transients, suggesting that radiation pressure (in addition to other mechanisms such as Compton-heating) plays a key role in V404 Cyg. In addition, we compare the evolution of the 2015 and 1989 outbursts and find clear similarities (namely a large luminosity drop ~10 d after the X-ray trigger, followed by a brief nebular phase) but also remarkable differences in decay timescales and long-term evolution of the Halpha profile. In particular, we see evidence for a rapid disc contraction in 2015, consistent with a burst of mass transfer. This could be driven by the response of the companion to hard X-ray illumination, most notably during the last gigantic (super-Eddington) flare on 25 June 2015. We argue that irradiation and consequential disc wind are key factors to understand the different outburst histories in 1989 and 2015. In the latter case, radiation pressure may be responsible for the abrupt end of the outburst through depleting inner parts of the disc, thus quenching accretion and X-ray irradiation. We also present a refined orbital period and updated ephemeris.

## Full text

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## Figures

12 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.00005/full.md

## References

113 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.00005/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.00005