Bibcode
López, K. M.; Jonker, P. G.; Torres, M. A. P.; Heida, M.; Rau, A.; Steeghs, D.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 482, Issue 2, p.2149-2165
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1
2019
Citations
9
Refereed citations
7
Description
We present near-infrared and optical imaging of 15 candidate black hole
X-ray binaries. In addition to quiescent observations for all sources,
we also observed two of these sources (IGR J17451-3022 and XTE
J1818-245) in outburst. We detect the quiescent counterpart for 12 out
of 15 sources, and for the remaining 3, we report limiting magnitudes.
The magnitudes of the detected counterparts range between Ks
= 17.59 and Ks = 22.29 mag. We provide (limits on) the
absolute magnitudes and finding charts of all sources. Of these 12
detections in quiescence, 7 detections represent the first quiescent
reported values (for MAXI J1543-564, XTE J1726-476, IGR J17451-3022, XTE
J1818-245, MAXI J1828-249, MAXI J1836-194, Swift J1910.2-0546), and 2
detections show fainter counterparts to XTE J1752-223 and XTE J2012+381
than previously reported. We used theoretical arguments and observed
trends, for instance between the outburst and quiescent X-ray luminosity
and orbital period Porb to derive an expected trend between
ΔKs and Porb of Δ K_s ∝ log
P_orb^{0.565}. Comparing this to observations, we find a different
behaviour. We discuss possible explanations for this result.
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Black holes, neutron stars, white dwarfs and their local environment
Accreting black-holes and neutron stars in X-ray binaries provide an ideal laboratory for exploring the physics of compact objects, yielding not only confirmation of the existence of stellar mass black holes via dynamical mass measurements, but also the best opportunity for probing high-gravity environments and the physics of accretion; the most
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