Abstract
We present three Suzaku observations of the black hole candidate 4U 1957+11 (V1408 Aql) - a source that exhibits some of the simplest and cleanest examples of soft, disk-dominated spectra. 4U 1957+11 also presents among the highest peak temperatures found from disk-dominated spectra. Such temperatures may be associated with rapid black hole spin. The 4U 1957+11 spectra also require a very low normalization, which can be explained by a combination of small inner disk radius and a large distance (>10kpc) which places 4U 1957+11 well into the Galactic halo. We perform joint fits to the Suzaku spectra with both relativistic and Comptonized disk models. Assuming a low-mass black hole and the nearest distance (3M, 10kpc), the dimensionless spin parameter a* ≡ Jc/GM 2 ≳ 0.9. Higher masses and farther distances yield a* 1. Similar conclusions are reached with Comptonization models; they imply a combination of small inner disk radii (or, equivalently, rapid spin) and large distance. Low spin cannot be recovered unless 4U 1957+11 is a low-mass black hole that is at the unusually large distance of ≳ 40kpc. We speculate whether the suggested maximal spin is related to how the system came to reside in the halo. © 2012. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
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Nowak, M. A., Wilms, J., Pottschmidt, K., Schulz, N., Maitra, D., & Miller, J. (2012). Suzaku observations of 4U 1957+11: Potentially the most rapidly spinning black hole in (the halo of) the galaxy. Astrophysical Journal, 744(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/744/2/107
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