The High Energy X-ray Probe (HEX-P): Probing Accretion onto Stellar Mass Black Holes
Riley Connors, John Tomsick, Paul Draghis, Benjamin Coughenour, Aarran, Shaw, Javier Garcia, Dominic Walton, Kristin Madsen, Daniel Stern, Nicole, Cavero Rodriguez, Thomas Dauser, Melania Del Santo, Jiachen Jiang, Henric, Krawczynski, Honghui Liu, Joseph Neilsen, Michael Nowak

TL;DR
The HEX-P mission concept aims to revolutionize the study of stellar-mass black hole accretion by providing high-resolution, broad-spectrum X-ray observations to address fundamental questions about black hole physics and accretion processes.
Contribution
This paper demonstrates, through simulations, how HEX-P will uniquely advance understanding of black hole accretion, spin, and corona physics with superior sensitivity and spectral coverage.
Findings
HEX-P can measure accretion flow structures at low luminosities.
It will provide detailed spectral data on coronal plasma.
HEX-P enables broadband studies of black holes in nearby galaxies.
Abstract
Accretion is a universal astrophysical process that plays a key role in cosmic history, from the epoch of reionization to galaxy and stellar formation and evolution. Accreting stellar-mass black holes in X-ray binaries are one of the best laboratories to study the accretion process and probe strong gravity -- and most importantly, to measure the angular momentum, or spin, of black holes, and its role as a powering mechanism for relativistic astrophysical phenomena. Comprehensive characterization of the disk-corona system of accreting black holes, and their co-evolution, is fundamental to measurements of black hole spin. Here, we use simulated data to demonstrate how key unanswered questions in the study of accreting stellar-mass black holes will be addressed by the {\it High Energy X-ray Probe} (\hexp). \hexp\ is a probe-class mission concept that will combine high spatial resolution…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Mechanics and Biomechanics Studies
