Title: Discovery of a broad iron line in the black-hole candidate Swift J1753.5-0127, and the disk emission in the low/hard state revisited Authors: Beike Hiemstra, Paolo Soleri, Mariano Mendez, Tomaso Belloni, Reham Mostafa, Rudy Wijnands
We analysed simultaneous archival XMM-Newton and RXTE observations of the X-ray binary and black hole candidate Swift J1753.5-0127. In a previous analysis of the same data a soft thermal component was found in the X-ray spectrum, and the presence of an accretion disk extending close to the innermost stable circular orbit was proposed. This is in contrast with the standard picture in which the accretion disk is truncated at large radii in the low/hard state. We tested a number of spectral models and we found that several of them fit the observed spectra without the need of a soft disk-like component. This result implies that the classical paradigm of a truncated accretion disk in the low/hard state can not be ruled out by these data. We further discovered a broad iron emission line between 6 and 7 keV in these data. From fits to the line profile we found an inner disk radius that ranges between ~6-16 gravitational radii, which can be in fact much larger, up to ~250 gravitational radii, depending on the model used to fit the continuum and the line. We discuss the implications of these results in the context of a fully or partially truncated accretion disk.
VLT and Rossi XTE satellite probe violently variable black holes Unique observations of the flickering light from the surroundings of two black holes provide new insights into the colossal energy that flows at their hearts. By mapping out how well the variations in visible light match those in X-rays on very short timescales, astronomers have shown that magnetic fields must play a crucial role in the way black holes swallow matter.
Title: SWIFT J1753.5-0127: a surprising optical/X-ray cross-correlation function Authors: Martin Durant, Poshak Gandhi, Tariq Shahbaz, Andy Fabian, Jon Miller, V. S. Dhillon, Tom R. Marsh
We have conducted optical and X-ray simultaneous observations of SWIFT J1753.5-0127 with RXTE and ULTRACAM, while the system persisted in its relatively bright low/hard state. In the cross-correlation function (CCF), we find that the optical leads the X-rays by a few seconds with a broad negative peak, and has a smaller positive peak at positive lags. This is markedly different from what was seen for the similarly interesting system XTE J1118+480, and the first time such a correlation function has been so clearly measured. Furthermore, there appears to be a significant variation of the correlation with X-ray energy. We suggest a physical scenario for its origin.