The impact of thermal winds on the outburst lightcurves of black hole X-ray binaries
G. Dubus, C. Done, B. E. Tetarenko, J.-M. Hameury

TL;DR
This paper investigates how thermal winds driven by X-ray irradiation influence the stability, lightcurves, and outburst durations of black hole X-ray binaries, highlighting their role in persistent brightness and outburst features.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical model for thermal wind mass loss and explores its effects on outburst dynamics and lightcurve features in black hole X-ray binaries.
Findings
Thermal winds can stabilize outer discs in persistent systems.
Wind scattering enhances irradiation, affecting outburst lightcurves.
Mass loss alone cannot explain rapid outburst decay times.
Abstract
The observed signatures of winds from X-ray binaries are broadly consistent with thermal winds, driven by X-ray irradiation of the outer accretion disc. Thermal winds produce mass outflow rates that can exceed the accretion rate in the disc. We study the impact of this mass loss on the stability and lightcurves of X-ray binaries subject to the thermal-viscous instability, which drives their outbursts. Strong mass loss could shut off outbursts early, as proposed for the 2015 outburst of V404 Cyg. We use an analytical model for thermal (Compton) wind mass loss. Scattering in the strong wind expected of long Porb systems enhances the irradiation heating of the outer disc, keeping it stable against the thermal-viscous instability. This accounts very well for the existence of persistently bright systems with large discs such as Cyg X-2, 1E 1740.7-2942, or GRS 1758-258. Wind mass loss…
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