The truncated disk from Suzaku data of GX339-4 in the extreme very high state

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Abstract

We report on the geometry of accretion disk and high-energy coronae in the strong Comptonization state (the very high/steep power law/hard intermediate state) based on a Suzaku observation of the famous Galactic black hole GX339-4. These data were taken just before the peak of the 2006-2007 outburst, and the average X-ray luminosity in the 0.7-200keV band is estimated to be 2.9 × 1038 erg s-1 for a distance of 8kpc. We fit the spectrum with both simple (independent disk and corona) and sophisticated (energetically coupled disk and corona) models; all fits imply that the underlying optically thick disk is truncated significantly before the innermost stable circular orbit around the black hole. We show this directly by a comparison with similar broadband data from a disk-dominated spectrum at almost the same luminosity observed by XMM-Newton and RXTE 3days after the Suzaku observation. During the Suzaku observation, the quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO) frequency changes from 4.3Hz to 5.5Hz, while the spectrum softens. The energetically coupled model gives a corresponding 5% ± 8% decrease in the derived inner radius of the disk. While this is not significant, it is consistent with the predicted change in QPO frequency from the Lense-Thirring precession of the hot flow interior to the disk and/or a deformation mode of this flow, as a higher QPO frequency implies a smaller size scale for the corona. This is consistent with the truncated disk extending further inward toward the black hole. © 2012. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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Tamura, M., Kubota, A., Yamada, S., Done, C., Kolehmainen, M., Ueda, Y., & Torii, S. (2012). The truncated disk from Suzaku data of GX339-4 in the extreme very high state. Astrophysical Journal, 753(1). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/753/1/65

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