Searching for orbital period modulation in X-ray observations of the symbiotic X-ray binary GX 1+4
The symbiotic X-ray binary GX 1+4 possesses a number of peculiar properties that have been studied since the early 1970s. In particular, the orbital period has been a point of debate for many years, until radial velocity measurements were able to settle the debate. These radial velocity findings hav...
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Zusammenfassung: | The symbiotic X-ray binary GX 1+4 possesses a number of peculiar properties
that have been studied since the early 1970s. In particular, the orbital period
has been a point of debate for many years, until radial velocity measurements
were able to settle the debate. These radial velocity findings have so far not
been confirmed using X-ray data, even though multiple factors would cause a
periodic variation on the same timescale as the orbital period at these
energies. Because the orbit of GX 1+4 is eccentric and not seen face-on,
changes in the accretion rate and column density along the line of sight could
cause a periodic variation in the spin-frequency measurements, X-ray light
curves, and hardness ratios of the source. Furthermore, for a high inclination
of the orbital plane, the neutron star could be eclipsed by the companion,
which would lead to periodic decreases in brightness. We used data from a
number of different X-ray telescopes to search directly for periodicity by
applying the Lomb-Scargle and epoch-folding approaches to long-term light-curve
and spin-frequency measurement data of the source. We support our findings
using folded light curves, hardness ratios, and images. We find that our
results agree with the radial velocity findings, and we form a self-consistent
model that is supported by folded hardness-ratios and light curves. We find
that the source is clearly detected in X-rays during the predicted eclipse.
Motivated by this absence of an eclipse in the system, we constrain the
inclination of the system to $\sim 76^\circ-84^\circ$ and the mass of the
neutron star in the system to $\sim1.23M_\odot - 1.45M_\odot$ using the
constraints on the red giant mass and surface gravity provided in the
literature. Furthermore, we constrain the radius of the red giant to $\sim
60R_\odot - 150R_\odot$. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.02092 |