XMM-Newton observations of UW CrB: Detection of X-ray bursts and evidence for accretion disc evolution

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Abstract

UW CrB (MS 1603+2600) is a peculiar short-period X-ray binary that exhibits extraordinary optical behaviour. The shape of the optical light curve of the system changes drastically from night to night, without any changes in overall brightness. Here we report X-ray observations of UW CrB obtained with XMM-Newton. We find evidence for several X-ray bursts, confirming a neutron star primary. This considerably strengthens the case that UW CrB is an accretion disc corona system located at a distance of at least 5-7 kpc (3-5 kpc above the Galactic plane). The X-ray and Optical Monitor (ultraviolet-optical) light curves show remarkable shape variation from one observing run to another, which we suggest are due to large-scale variations in the accretion disc shape resulting from a warp that periodically obscures the optical and soft X-ray emission. This is also supported by the changes in phase-resolved X-ray spectra.

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Hakala, P., Ramsay, G., Muhli, P., Charles, P., Hannikainen, D., Mukai, K., & Vilhu, O. (2005). XMM-Newton observations of UW CrB: Detection of X-ray bursts and evidence for accretion disc evolution. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 356(3), 1133–1138. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2004.08543.x

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