Optical Variability Correlated with X-ray Spectral Transition in the Black-Hole Transient ASASSN-18ey = MAXI J1820+070
Keito Niijima, Mariko Kimura, Yasuyuki Wakamatsu, Taichi Kato, Daisaku, Nogami, Keisuke Isogai, Naoto Kojiguchi, Ryuhei Ohnishi, Megumi Shidatsu,, Geoffrey Stone, Franz-Josef Hambsch, Tam\'as Tordai, Michael Richmond, Tonny, Vanmunster, Gordon Myers, Stephen M. Brincat

TL;DR
This study links optical variability with X-ray spectral transitions in a black-hole binary during outburst, revealing that optical signals precede X-ray changes and enabling new mass estimation methods.
Contribution
It demonstrates that optical periodic variations can predict X-ray state transitions and provides a novel way to estimate black-hole binary mass ratios.
Findings
Optical variations started 5 days before X-ray transitions.
Optical periodicity similar to superhumps observed in white-dwarf binaries.
First dynamical estimate of binary mass ratio using optical data in black-hole binaries.
Abstract
How a black hole accretes matter and how this process is regulated are fundamental but unsolved questions in astrophysics. In transient black-hole binaries, a lot of mass stored in an accretion disk is suddenly drained to the central black hole because of thermal-viscous instability. This phenomenon is called an outburst and is observable at various wavelengths (Frank et al., 2002). During the outburst, the accretion structure in the vicinity of a black hole shows dramatical transitions from a geometrically-thick hot accretion flow to a geometrically-thin disk, and the transition is observed at X-ray wavelengths (Remillard, McClintock, 2006; Done et al., 2007). However, how that X-ray transition occurs remains a major unsolved problem (Dunn et al., 2008). Here we report extensive optical photometry during the 2018 outburst of ASASSN-18ey (MAXI J1820070), a black-hole binary at a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanics and Biomechanics Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
