The 1998 outburst of the X-ray transient XTE J2012+381 as observed with BeppoSAX
Abstract
We report on the results of a series of X-ray observations of the transient black hole candidate XTE J2012+381 during the 1998 outburst performed with the BeppoSAX satellite. The observed broad-band energy spectrum can be described by the superposition of an absorbed disk black body, with an iron line plus a high energy component, modelled with either a power law or a Comptonisation tail. The source showed pronounced spectral variability between our five observations. While the soft component in the spectrum remained almost unchanged throughout our campaign, we detected a hard spectral tail which extended to 200 keV in the first two observations, but became barely detectable up to 50 keV in the following two. A further re-hardening is observed in the final observation. The transition from a hard to a soft and then back to a hard state occurred around an unabsorbed 0.1-200 keV luminosity of 1038 erg s-1 (at 10 kpc). This indicates that state transitions in XTE 2012+281 are probably not driven only by mass accretion rate, but additional physical parameters must play a role in the evolution of the outburst.
- Publication:
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Astronomy and Astrophysics
- Pub Date:
- March 2002
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:astro-ph/0112485
- Bibcode:
- 2002A&A...384..163C
- Keywords:
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- BINARIES: GENERAL;
- BLACK HOLE PHYSICS;
- STARS: INDIVIDUAL (XTE J2012+381);
- X-RAYS: STARS;
- Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- Paper accepted for publication on A&