Long term variability of Cygnus X-1. V. State definitions with all sky monitors

Open Access
Authors
  • V. Grinberg
  • N. Hell
  • K. Pottschmidt
  • M. Böck
  • M.A. Nowak
  • J. Rodriguez
  • A. Bodaghee
  • M. Cadolle Bel
  • G.L. Case
  • M. Hanke
  • M. Kühnel
  • S. Markoff
  • G.G. Pooley
  • R.E. Rothschild
  • J.A. Tomsick
  • C.A. Wilson-Hodge
  • J. Wilms
Publication date 2013
Journal Astronomy & Astrophysics
Volume | Issue number 554
Pages (from-to) A88
Number of pages 12
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We present a scheme for determining the spectral state of the canonical black hole Cyg X-1 using data from previous and current X-ray all sky monitors (RXTE-ASM, Swift-BAT, MAXI, and Fermi-GBM). Determinations of the hard/intermediate and soft state agree to better than 10% between different monitors, facilitating the determination of the state and its context for any observation of the source, potentially over the lifetimes of different individual monitors. A separation of the hard and the intermediate states, which strongly differ in their spectral shape and short-term timing behavior, is only possible when data in the soft X-rays (<5 keV) are available. A statistical analysis of the states confirms the different activity patterns of the source (e.g., month- to year-long hard-state periods or phases during which numerous transitions occur). It also shows that the hard and soft states are stable, with the probability of Cyg X-1 remaining in a given state for at least one week to be larger than 85% in the hard state and larger than 75% in the soft state. Intermediate states are short lived, with a 50% probability that the source leaves the intermediate state within three days. Reliable detection of these potentially short-lived events is only possible with monitor data that have a time resolution better than 1 d.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201321128
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