New insights on accretion in Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients from XMM-Newton and INTEGRAL observations of IGR J17544$-$2619 (1401.3570v1)
Abstract: XMM-Newton observations of the supergiant fast X-ray transient IGR$~$J17544$-$2619 are reported and placed in the context of an analysis of archival INTEGRAL/IBIS data that provides a refined estimate of the orbital period at 4.9272$\pm$0.0004 days. A complete outburst history across the INTEGRAL mission is reported. Although the new XMM-Newton observations (each lasting $\sim$15 ks) targeted the peak flux in the phase-folded hard X-ray light curve of IGR$~$J17544$-$2619, no bright outbursts were observed, the source spending the majority of the exposure at intermediate luminosities of the order of several 10${33}\,$erg$\,$s${-1}$ (0.5$\,-\,$10$\,$keV) and displaying only low level flickering activity. For the final portion of the exposure, the luminosity of IGR$~$J17544$-$2619 dropped to $\sim$4$\times$10${32}\,$erg$\,$s${-1}$ (0.5 - 10 keV), comparable with the lowest luminosities ever detected from this source, despite the observations being taken near to periastron. We consider the possible orbital geometry of IGR$~$J17544$-$2619 and the implications for the nature of the mass transfer and accretion mechanisms for both IGR$~$J17544$-$2619 and the SFXT population. We conclude that accretion under the `quasi-spherical accretion' model provides a good description of the behaviour of IGR$~$J17544$-$2619, and suggest an additional mechanism for generating outbursts based upon the mass accumulation rate in the hot shell (atmosphere) that forms around the NS under the quasi-spherical formulation. Hence we hope to aid in explaining the varied outburst behaviours observed across the SFXT population with a consistent underlying physical model.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.