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A&A 453, 253-259 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20053964
Boundary layer emission and Z-track in the color-color diagram of luminous LMXBs
M. G. Revnivtsev1, 2 and M. R. Gilfanov1, 21 Max-Planck-Institute für Astrophysik, Karl-Schwarzschild-Str. 1, 85740 Garching bei München, Germany
e-mail: mikej@mpa-garching.mpg.de
2 Space Research Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Profsoyuznaya 84/32, 117997 Moscow, Russia
(Received 2 August 2005 / Accepted 20 February 2006 )
Abstract
Aims.We explore the accretion disk and boundary layer emission in bright
neutron star LMXBs and their dependence on the mass accretion rate.
Methods.We used Fourier-frequency resolved spectroscopy of the archival RXTE data.
Results.
We demonstrate that Fourier-frequency resolved spectra
of atoll and Z-sources are identical, despite significant differences
in their average spectra and luminosity (by a factor of
10-20).
This result fits in the picture we suggested earlier, namely that the
Hz variability in luminous LMXBs is primarily due to
variations in the boundary layer luminosity. In this picture the
frequency-resolved spectrum equals the boundary layer spectrum, which
therefore can be straightforwardly determined from the data.
This boundary layer spectrum is approximated well by
the saturated Comptonization model, and its high energy cut-off follows
a
keV blackbody. Its independence from the global
mass-accretion rate lends support to a
theoretical suggestion, that the boundary layer
is supported by radiation pressure. With this assumption we constrain
the gravity on the neutron star surface, its mass and radius.
Equipped with the knowledge of the boundary layer spectrum, we attempt
to relate the motion along the Z-track to changes of physically
meaningful parameters. Our results suggest that the contribution of
the boundary layer to the observed emission decreases along the
Z-track from conventional ~50% on the horizontal branch to a
rather small number on the normal branch. This decrease can be
caused, for example, by obscuration of the boundary layer by the
geometrically thick accretion disk at
. Alternatively, this can indicate a significant change in the
structure of the accretion flow at
and the disappearance of the boundary layer as a distinct region of the
significant energy release associated with the neutron star surface.
Key words: accretion, accretion disks -- stars: binaries: general -- X-rays: general -- X-rays: binaries -- stars: novae, cataclysmic variables
© ESO 2006
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