A precise position and optical identification for 4U 2129+47: X-ray heating and a 5.2 hour binary period.
Abstract
A precise (20 arcsec) position and an optical counterpart are presented for the weak X-ray source 4U 2129+47. The optical counterpart shows weak but distinct He II 4686-A and C III-N III 4640-4650-A emission. Both H-beta and Ca II H and K are sometimes visible in absorption. Numerous plates and spectrophotometric observations from the 1978 observing season show that the blue magnitude varies from 16.7 to 18.0 in a period of 5.2382 hours. The light curve is sinusoidal in appearance, but with sharply defined V-shaped minima. It is proposed that most of the optical emission from this system originates at the X-ray heated face of the normal star and hence that this system is analogous to HZ Her/Her X-1. This is one of the few intrinsically faint optical counterparts of X-ray sources that show clear evidence of binary nature. The observations suggest a distance of 1.2-1.6 kpc for the source, and a consequent X-ray luminosity of approximately 10 to the 34.8 ergs/s.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- October 1979
- DOI:
- 10.1086/183076
- Bibcode:
- 1979ApJ...233L..57T
- Keywords:
-
- Binary Stars;
- Radiant Heating;
- Variable Stars;
- X Ray Irradiation;
- X Ray Sources;
- X Ray Stars;
- Heao 1;
- Light Curve;
- Light Emission;
- Position (Location);
- Stellar Spectrophotometry;
- Astrophysics;
- Positions:X-Ray Sources;
- X-Ray Binaries:Optical Counterparts