The High Energy X-ray Probe (HEX-P): Probing Accretion onto Stellar Mass Black Holes
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...
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Zusammenfassung: | 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 X-ray imaging and
broad spectral coverage ($0.2\mbox{--}80$keV) with a sensitivity superior to
current facilities (including \xmm\ and \nustar) to enable revolutionary new
insights into a variety of important astrophysical problems. We illustrate the
capability of \hexp\ to: 1) measure the evolving structures of black hole
binary accretion flows down to low ($\lesssim0.1\%$) Eddington-scaled
luminosities via detailed X-ray reflection spectroscopy; 2) provide
unprecedented spectral observations of the coronal plasma, probing its elusive
geometry and energetics; 3) perform detailed broadband studies of stellar mass
black holes in nearby galaxies, thus expanding the repertoire of sources we can
use to study accretion physics and determine the fundamental nature of black
holes; and 4) act as a complementary observatory to a range of future ground
and space-based astronomical observatories, thus providing key spectral
measurements of the multi-component emission from the inner accretion flows of
BH-XRBs. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2311.04782 |