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The Swift bulge survey: motivation, strategy, and first X-ray results

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-07-11, 07:43 authored by A Bahramian, CO Heinke, JA Kennea, TJ Maccarone, PA Evans, R Wijnands, N Degenaar, JJM in't Zand, AW Shaw, LE Rivera Sandoval, S McClure, AJ Tetarenko, J Strader, E Kuulkers, GR Sivakoff
Very faint X-ray transients (VFXTs) are X-ray transients with peak X-ray luminosities (LX) of LX ≲ 1036 erg s-1, which are not well understood. We carried out a survey of 16 deg2 of the Galactic Bulge with the Swift Observatory, using short (60 s) exposures, and returning every 2 weeks for 19 epochs in 2017-18 (with a gap from 2017 November to 2018 February, when the Bulge was in sun-constraint). Our main goal was to detect and study VFXT behaviour in the Galactic Bulge across various classes of X-ray sources. In this work, we explain the observing strategy of the survey, compare our results with the expected number of source detections per class, and discuss the constraints from our survey on the Galactic VFXT population. We detected 91 X-ray sources, 25 of which have clearly varied by a factor of at least 10. In total, 45 of these X-ray sources have known counterparts: 17 chromospherically active stars, 12 X-ray binaries, 5 cataclysmic variables (and 4 candidates), 3 symbiotic systems, 2 radio pulsars, 1 active galactic nuclei, and a young star cluster. The other 46 are of previously undetermined nature. We utilize X-ray hardness ratios, searches for optical/infrared counterparts in published catalogues, and flux ratios from quiescence to outburst to constrain the nature of the unknown sources. Of these 46, 7 are newly discovered hard transients, which are likely VFXT X-ray binaries. Furthermore, we find strong new evidence for a symbiotic nature of four sources in our full sample, and new evidence for accretion power in six X-ray sources with optical counterparts. Our findings indicate that a large subset of VXFTs is likely made up of symbiotic systems.

History

Author affiliation

Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume

501

Issue

2

Pagination

2790 - 2809

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP) for Royal Astronomical Society

issn

0035-8711

eissn

1365-2966

Acceptance date

2020-12-11

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2022-07-11

Language

English