A transient ultraviolet outflow in the short-period X-ray binary UW CrB

Abstract

Accreting low mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) are capable of launching powerful outflows such as accretion disc winds. In disc winds, vast amounts of material can be carried away, potentially greatly impacting the binary and its environment. Previous studies have uncovered signatures of disc winds in the X-ray, optical, near-infrared, and recently even the UV band, predominantly in LMXBs with large discs (Porb20P_{orb}{\geq}20 hrs). Here, we present the discovery of transient UV outflow features in UW CrB, a high-inclination (i77i{\geq}77\deg) neutron star LMXB with an orbital period of only Porb111P_{orb}{\approx}111 min. We present P-Cygni profiles detected for Si iv 1400\r{A} and tentatively for N v 1240\r{A} in one 15 min exposure, which is the only exposure covering orbital phase ϕ0.70.8\phi{\approx}0.7{-}0.8, with a velocity of 1500{\approx}1500 km/s. We show that due to the presence of black body emission from the neutron star surface and/or boundary layer, a thermal disc wind can be driven despite the short PorbP_{orb}, but explore alternative scenarios as well. The discovery that thermal disc winds may occur in NS-LMXBs with PorbP_{orb} as small as 111{\approx}111 min, and can potentially be transient on time scales as short as 15{\approx}15 min, warrants further observational and theoretical work

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions