Simulating the Collapse of a Thick Accretion Disk due to a Type I X-Ray Burst from a Neutron Star

Fragile, P. Chris and Ballantyne, David R. and Maccarone, Thomas J. and Witry, Jason W. L. (2018) Simulating the Collapse of a Thick Accretion Disk due to a Type I X-Ray Burst from a Neutron Star. The Astrophysical Journal, 867 (2). L28. ISSN 2041-8213

[thumbnail of Fragile_2018_ApJL_867_L28.pdf] Text
Fragile_2018_ApJL_867_L28.pdf - Published Version

Download (1MB)

Abstract

We use two-dimensional, general relativistic, viscous, radiation hydrodynamic simulations to study the impact of a Type I X-ray burst on a hot and geometrically thick accretion disk surrounding an unmagnetized, non-rotating neutron star. The disk is initially consistent with a system in its low/hard spectral state, and is subject to a burst that rises to a peak luminosity of 1038 erg s−1 in 2.05 s. At the peak of the burst, the temperature of the disk has dropped by more than three orders of magnitude and its scale height has gone down by more than one order of magnitude. The simulations show that these effects predominantly happen due to Compton cooling of the hot plasma, and clearly illustrate the potential cooling effects of bursts on accretion disk coronae. In addition, we demonstrate the presence of Poynting–Robertson drag, though it only enhances the mass accretion rate onto the neutron star by a factor of ∼3–4 compared to a simulation with no burst. Simulations such as these are important for building a general understanding of the response of an accretion disk to an intense X-ray impulse, which, in turn, will be crucial for deciphering burst spectra. Detailed analysis of such spectra offers the potential to measure neutron star radii, and hence constrain the neutron star equation of state, but only if the contributions coming from the impacted disk and its associated corona can be understood.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Archive Paper Guardians > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@archive.paperguardians.com
Date Deposited: 27 Jun 2023 07:04
Last Modified: 06 Dec 2023 04:31
URI: http://archives.articleproms.com/id/eprint/1369

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item