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ASASSN-18ey: The Rise of a New Black-Hole X-ray Binary

Authors :
John L. Tonry
John F. Beacom
L. Denneau
Michael A. Tucker
A. N. Heinze
Kristen C. Dage
Subo Dong
H. Weiland
A. Rest
Thomas W.-S. Holoien
B. Stalder
Laura Chomiuk
Arash Bahramian
Todd A. Thompson
J. V. Shields
J. L. Prieto
K. W. Smith
Benjamin J. Shappee
Asas-Sn
H. Flewelling
Katie Auchettl
Christopher S. Kochanek
Krzysztof Z. Stanek
Jay Strader
D. M. Rowan
M. E. Huber
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

We present the discovery of ASASSN-18ey (MAXI J1820+070), a new black hole low-mass X-ray binary discovered by the All-Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae (ASAS-SN). A week after ASAS-SN discovered ASASSN-18ey as an optical transient, it was detected as an X-ray transient by MAXI/GCS. Here, we analyze ASAS-SN and Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) pre-outburst optical light curves, finding evidence of intrinsic variability for several years prior to the outburst. While there was no long-term rise leading to outburst, as has been seen in several other systems, the start of the outburst in the optical preceded that in the X-rays by $7.20\pm0.97~\rm days$. We analyze the spectroscopic evolution of ASASSN-18ey from pre-maximum to $> 100~\rm days$ post-maximum. The spectra of ASASSN-18ey exhibit broad, asymmetric, double-peaked H$\alpha$ emission. The Bowen blend ($\lambda \approx 4650$\AA) in the post-maximum spectra shows highly variable double-peaked profiles, likely arising from irradiation of the companion by the accretion disk, typical of low-mass X-ray binaries. The optical and X-ray luminosities of ASASSN-18ey are consistent with black hole low-mass X-ray binaries, both in outburst and quiescence.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted by ApJL. A summary video describing this publication can be found at https://youtu.be/YbM_koBfRSI

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....458caa79e3a7fe78e9b51bf94b7c64f3