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Investigating the nature and properties of MAXI J1810-222 with radio and X-ray observations

Authors :
European Commission
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Russell, Thomas P.
Santo, Melania del
Marino, Alessio
Segreto, A.
Motta, S. E.
Bahramian, Arash
Corbel, S.
D'Aí, A.
Salvo, Tiziana di
Miller-Jones, J. C. A.
Pinto, C.
Pintore, Fabio
Tzioumis, A.
European Commission
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Russell, Thomas P.
Santo, Melania del
Marino, Alessio
Segreto, A.
Motta, S. E.
Bahramian, Arash
Corbel, S.
D'Aí, A.
Salvo, Tiziana di
Miller-Jones, J. C. A.
Pinto, C.
Pintore, Fabio
Tzioumis, A.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present results from radio and X-ray observations of the X-ray transient MAXI J1810-222. The nature of the accretor in this source has not been identified. In this paper, we show results from a quasi-simultaneous radio and X-ray monitoring campaign taken with the Australia Telescope Compact Array, the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory X-ray Telescope (XRT), and the Swift Burst Alert Telescope. We also analyse the X-ray temporal behaviour using observations from the Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer. Results show a seemingly peculiar X-ray spectral evolution of MAXI J1810-222 during this outburst, where the source was initially only detected in the soft X-ray band for the early part of the outburst. Then, ∼200 d after MAXI J1810-222 was first detected the hard X-ray emission increased and the source transitioned to a long-lived (∼1.5 yr) bright, harder X-ray state. After this hard state, MAXI J1810-222 returned back to a softer state, before fading and transitioning again to a harder state and then appearing to follow a more typical outburst decay. From the X-ray spectral and timing properties, and the source's radio behaviour, we argue that the results from this study are most consistent with MAXI J1810-222 being a relatively distant (≳6 kpc) black hole X-ray binary. A sufficiently large distance to source can simply explain the seemingly odd outburst evolution that was observed, where only the brightest portion of the outburst was detectable by the all-sky XRTs.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1348917240
Document Type :
Electronic Resource