Enhanced optical activity 12 days before X-ray activity, and a 4 day X-ray delay during outburst rise, in a low-mass X-ray binary
A. J. Goodwin (1), D. M. Russell, D. K. Galloway, M. C. Baglio, A. S., Parikh, D. A. H. Buckley, J. Homan, D. M. Bramich, J. J. M. in 't Zand, C. O., Heinke, E. J. Kotze, D. de Martino, A. Papitto, F. Lewis, and R. Wijnands, ((1) School of Physics, Astronomy, Monash University

TL;DR
This study presents the earliest multiwavelength observations of a neutron star low-mass X-ray binary outburst, revealing optical activity 12 days before X-ray detection and delays between optical, UV, and X-ray emissions, supporting disk instability models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multiwavelength timing analysis of outburst onset in such systems, confirming optical delays and disk ionization triggers.
Findings
Optical brightening begins 12 days before X-ray detection.
A 4-day optical to X-ray delay observed during outburst onset.
Evidence supports hydrogen ionization as the trigger for outbursts.
Abstract
X-ray transients, such as accreting neutron stars, periodically undergo outbursts, thought to be caused by a thermal-viscous instability in the accretion disk. Usually outbursts of accreting neutron stars are identified when the accretion disk has undergone an instability, and the persistent X-ray flux has risen to a threshold detectable by all sky monitors on X-ray space observatories. Here we present the earliest known combined optical, UV, and X-ray monitoring observations of the outburst onset of an accreting neutron star low mass X-ray binary system. We observed a significant, continuing increase in the optical i'-band magnitude starting on July 25, 12 days before the first X-ray detection with Swift/XRT and NICER (August 6), during the onset of the 2019 outburst of SAX J1808.4-3658. We also observed a 4 day optical to X-ray rise delay, and a 2 day UV to X-ray delay, at the onset…
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