http://arxiv.org/abs/2012.00169
AT2019wey (ATLAS19bcxp, SRGA J043520.9+552226, SRGE J043523.3+552234, ZTF19acwrvzk) is a transient reported by the ATLAS optical survey in December 2019, but shot to fame upon detection, three months later, by the Spektrum-Roentgen-Gamma (SRG) mission in its on-going sky survey. Here we present our ultraviolet, optical, near-infrared and radio observations of this object. Our X-ray observations are reported in a separate paper. We conclude that AT2019wey is a newly discovered Galactic low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB) and a candidate black hole (BH) system. Remarkably, we demonstrate that from ~58950 MJD to ~59100 MJD, despite the significant brightening in radio and X-ray (more than a factor of 10), the optical luminosity of AT2019wey only increased by 1.3–1.4. We interpret the bright UV/optical source in the dim low/hard state (~58950 MJD) as thermal emission from a truncated disk in a hot accretion flow, and the UV/optical emission in the hard-intermediate state (~59100 MJD) as reprocessing of X-ray flux in the outer accretion disk. We discuss the power of combining current wide-field optical surveys and SRG in the discovery of the emerging population of short-period BH LMXB systems with low accretion rates.
Y. Yao, S. Kulkarni, K. Burdge, et. al.
Wed, 2 Dec 20
1/71
Comments: 22 pages, 17 figures, submitted to ApJ
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