Bibcode
Shahbaz, T.; Charles, P. A.; King, A. R.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 301, Issue 2, pp. 382-388.
Advertised on:
12
1998
Citations
85
Refereed citations
75
Description
A recent paper by King & Ritter proposed that the light curves of
soft X-ray transients (SXTs) are dominated by the effect of irradiation
of the accretion disc by the central X-rays. This prevents the onset of
the cooling wave which would otherwise return the disc to the quiescent
state, and so prolongs the outbursts beyond those in dwarf nova discs.
KR show that the decay of the resulting X-ray light curve should be
exponential or linear depending on whether or not the observed peak
X-ray luminosity is sufficient to ionize the outer edge of the accretion
disc. Here we examine the observed X-ray decays, and show that they are
exponential or linear according to whether the peak luminosity is
greater or smaller than the critical value defined by KR, strongly
suggesting that the light curves are indeed irradiation dominated. We
show further that the occurrence of an exponential or linear decay tends
to favour the same type of decay in subsequent outbursts, so that
systems usually show only one or the other type. We use the equations of
KR and the observed X-ray light curve to determine the size R_h of the
hot disc at the peak of the outburst. For exponential decays, R_h is
found to be comparable to the circularization radius, as expected, since
the disc consists entirely of material transferred from the secondary
since the previous outburst. Further, R_h is directly proportional to
the time at which one sees the secondary maximum (t_s), as expected, if
t_s is the viscous time-scale of the irradiated disc. This implies that
the orders of magnitude of the viscosity parameter alpha and disc aspect
ratio H/R are such that alpha(H/R)~0.01. Observation of a secondary
maximum calibrates the peak luminosity and gives the distance (D_kpc) to
the source as D_kpc=4.3x10^-5t^3/2_sepsilon^1/2f^1/2F^-1/2_ptau^-1/2_d
where F_p is the peak flux, tau_d is the e-folding time of the decay in
days, epsilon is the radiation efficiency parameter and f is the ratio
of the disc mass at the start of the outburst to the maximum possible
mass.