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XMM Spectroscopy of the Transient Supersoft Source RX J0513.9-6951: probing the dynamic white dwarf photosphere

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 Publication date 2005
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The highly luminous (> 10^37 erg s^-1) supersoft X-ray sources (SSS) are believed to be Eddington limited accreting white dwarfs undergoing surface hydrogen burning. The current paradigm for SSS involves thermally unstable mass transfer from a 1-2 solar mass companion. However this model has never been directly confirmed and yet is crucial for the evolution of cataclysmic variables in general, and for the establishment of SSS as progenitors of type Ia supernovae in particular. The key SSS is RX J0513.9-6951 which has recurrent X-ray outbursts every 100-200 d (lasting for ~40 d) during which the optical declines by 1 mag. We present the first XMM-Newton observations of RX J0513.9-6951 through one of its optical low states. Our results show that as the optical low state progresses the temperature and the X-ray luminosity decrease, behaviour that is anti-correlated with the optical and UV emission. We find that as the optical (and UV) intensity recover the radius implied by the spectral fits increases. The high resolution spectra show evidence of deep absorption features which vary during the optical low state. Our results are consistent with the predictions of the white dwarf photospheric contraction model proposed by Southwell et al. 1996.



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We have obtained spectroscopy with the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) of the supersoft X-ray binary RX J0513.9-6951 over a complete binary orbital cycle. The spectra show a hot continuum with extremely broad O VI emission and weak Lyman absorptions. He II emission is weak and narrow, while N III and C III emissions are undetected, although lines from these ions are prominent at optical wavelengths. The broad O VI emission and Lyman absorption show radial velocity curves that are approximately antiphased and have semiamplitudes of ~117 +- 40 and 54 +- 10 km/s, respectively. Narrow emissions from He II and O VI show small velocity variations with phasing different from the broad O VI, but consistent with the optical line peaks. We also measure considerable changes in the FUV continuum and O VI emission line flux. We discuss the possible causes of the measured variations and a tentative binary interpretation.
137 - V. Burwitz 2008
The supersoft X-ray binary RX J0513.9-6951 shows cyclic changes between optical-low / X-ray-on states and optical-high / X-ray-off states. It is supposed to be accreting close to the Eddington-critical limit and driven by accretion wind evolution. We seek to derive the variations in the characteristic time scales of the long-term optical light curve and to determine the implications for the physical parameters of the system. We used existing and new optical monitoring observations covering a total time span of 14 years and compared the durations of the low and high states with the model calculations of Hachisu & Kato. The cycle lengths and especially the durations of the optical high states show a longterm modulation with variations that, according to the accretion wind evolution model, would imply variations in the mass transfer rate by a factor of 5 on timescales of years.
FUSE observations were obtained in July 2003 during 1.2 cycles of the 0.76-day binary orbit of RX J0513.9-6951. Radial velocity measurements of the broad O VI emission profile show a semiamplitude of K~26 km/sec, which is much smaller than the value of 117 km/sec measured from 2001 FUSE data. Narrow O VI emissions show no measurable velocity variation. The mean velocity of the broad O VI emission is red-shifted by ~500 km/sec with respect to both the systemic and narrow emission-line velocities. Spectral difference plots show phase-related changes in the broad emission profile. Other phase-related changes such as line and continuum variations are also smaller than in the 2001 spectra. We describe a moving broad absorption feature near 1020A as possible O VI outflow associated with a precessing jet. We discuss the implications for the stellar masses if the 2003 broad O VI velocities outline the compact stars orbital motion.
We have analyzed nearly eight years of MACHO optical photometry of the supersoft X-ray binary RX J0513.9-6951 and derived a revised orbital period and ephemeris. Previously published velocities are reinterpreted using the new ephemeris. We show that the spectroscopic characteristics of the system depend strongly on whether the system is in a high or low optical state. We also discuss the properties of the sources high/low optical states and its long-term light curve. Evidence for a 83.3-day periodicity in the photometry is presented.
91 - A.S. Oliveira 2010
Context. Close binary supersoft X-ray sources (CBSS) are binary systems that contain a white dwarf with stable nuclear burning on its surface. These sources, first discovered in the Magellanic Clouds, have high accretion rates and near-Eddington luminosities (10^37 - 10^38 erg/s) with high temperatures (T = 2 - 7 x 10^5 K). Aims. The total number of known objects in the MC is still small and, in our galaxy, even smaller. We observed the field of the unidentified transient supersoft X-ray source RX J0527.8-6954 in order to identify its optical counterpart. Methods. The observation was made with the IFU-GMOS on the Gemini South telescope with the purpose of identifying stars with possible He II or Balmer emission or else of observing nebular extended jets or ionization cones, features that may be expected in CBSS. Results. The X-ray source is identified with a B5e V star that is associated with subarcsecond extended Halpha emission, possibly bipolar. Conclusions. If the primary star is a white dwarf, as suggested by the supersoft X-ray spectrum, the expected orbital period exceeds 21 h; therefore, we believe that the 9.4 h period found so far is not associated to this system.
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