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HST spectrum and timing of the ultra-compact X-ray binary candidate 47 Tuc X9

Authors :
Roberto Soria
Thomas M. Tauris
Slavko Bogdanov
Vlad Tudor
Michael D. Albrow
Thomas J. Maccarone
Laura Chomiuk
Christopher T. Britt
Richard M. Plotkin
M. van den Berg
Arash Bahramian
G. E. Anderson
Federico Bernardini
G. R. Sivakoff
Jay Strader
Christian Knigge
David R. Zurek
D. M. Russell
Craig O. Heinke
James Miller-Jones
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

To confirm the nature of the donor star in the ultra-compact X-ray binary candidate 47 Tuc X9, we obtained optical spectra (3,000$-$10,000 {\AA}) with the Hubble Space Telescope / Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. We find no strong emission or absorption features in the spectrum of X9. In particular, we place $3\sigma$ upper limits on the H$\alpha$ and HeII $\lambda 4686$ emission line equivalent widths $-$EW$_{\mathrm{H\alpha}} \lesssim 14$ {\AA} and $-$EW$_{\mathrm{HeII}} \lesssim 9$ {\AA}, respectively. This is much lower than seen for typical X-ray binaries at a similar X-ray luminosity (which, for $L_{\mathrm{2-10 keV}} \approx 10^{33}-10^{34}$ erg s$^{-1}$ is typically $-$EW$_{\mathrm{H\alpha}} \sim 50$ {\AA}). This supports our previous suggestion (by Bahramian et al.) of an H-poor donor in X9. We perform timing analysis on archival far-ultraviolet, $V$ and $I$-band data to search for periodicities. In the optical bands we recover the seven-day superorbital period initially discovered in X-rays, but we do not recover the orbital period. In the far-ultraviolet we find evidence for a 27.2 min period (shorter than the 28.2 min period seen in X-rays). We find that either a neutron star or black hole could explain the observed properties of X9. We also perform binary evolution calculations, showing that the formation of an initial black hole / He-star binary early in the life of a globular cluster could evolve into a present-day system such as X9 (should the compact object in this system indeed be a black hole) via mass-transfer driven by gravitational wave radiation.<br />Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ba9046ecbd949dc85b25d5414cc65305