X-ray and optical observations of the black hole candidate MAXI J1828−249

Abstract We report results from X-ray and optical observations of the Galactic black hole candidate MAXI J1828−249 performed with Suzaku and the Kanata telescope around the X-ray flux peak in the 2013 outburst. The time-averaged X-ray spectrum covering 0.6–168 keV was approximately characterized by...

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Veröffentlicht in:Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan 2019-10, Vol.71 (5)
Hauptverfasser: Oda, Sonoe, Shidatsu, Megumi, Nakahira, Satoshi, Tamagawa, Toru, Moritani, Yuki, Itoh, Ryosuke, Ueda, Yoshihiro, Negoro, Hitoshi, Makishima, Kazuo, Kawai, Nobuyuki, Mihara, Tatehiro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract We report results from X-ray and optical observations of the Galactic black hole candidate MAXI J1828−249 performed with Suzaku and the Kanata telescope around the X-ray flux peak in the 2013 outburst. The time-averaged X-ray spectrum covering 0.6–168 keV was approximately characterized by a strong multi-color disk blackbody component with an inner disk temperature of ∼0.6 keV, and a power-law tail with a photon index of ∼2.0. We detected an additional structure at 5–10 keV, which can be modeled neither with X-ray reflection on the disk nor relativistic broadening of the disk emission. Instead, it was successfully reproduced with a Comptonization of disk photons by thermal electrons with a relatively low temperature (≲10 keV). We infer that the source was in the intermediate state, considering its long-term trend in the hardness intensity diagram, the strength of the spectral power-law tail, and its variability properties. The low-temperature Comptonization component could be produced in a boundary region between the truncated standard disk and the hot inner flow, or a Comptonizing region that somehow developed above the disk surface. The multi-wavelength spectral energy distribution suggests that the optical and ultraviolet fluxes were dominated by irradiated outer disk emission.
ISSN:0004-6264
2053-051X
DOI:10.1093/pasj/psz091