A Rapidly Varying Red Supergiant X-Ray Binary in the Galactic Center
Amy M. Gottlieb, Stephen S. Eikenberry, Kendall Ackley, Curtis DeWitt,, and Amparo Marco

TL;DR
This study identifies a red supergiant X-ray binary in the Galactic Center exhibiting rapid infrared variability likely caused by a transient X-ray flare, suggesting it may be the first red supergiant supergiant fast X-ray transient.
Contribution
The paper reports the discovery of a red supergiant X-ray binary with rapid IR variability, proposing it as a potential first red supergiant SFXT, expanding understanding of such systems.
Findings
Infrared counterpart shows ~0.5 mag variability in hours.
System's X-ray luminosity is much lower than IR variability.
Proposed as the first red supergiant SFXT.
Abstract
We analyzed multiwavelength observations of the previously identified Galactic center X-ray binary CXO 174528.79-290942.8 (XID 6592) and determine that the near-infrared counterpart is a red supergiant based on its spectrum and luminosity. Scutum X-1 is the only previously known X-ray binary with a red supergiant donor star and closely resembles XID 6592 in terms of X-ray luminosity (L), absolute magnitude, and IR variability (L), supporting the conclusion that XID 6592 contains a red supergiant donor star. The XID 6592 infrared counterpart shows variability of 0.5 mag in the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer-1 band (3.4 m) on timescales of a few hours. Other infrared data sets also show large-amplitude variability from this source at earlier epochs but do not show significant variability in recent data. We do not expect red supergiants to…
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