Biswajit Paul, M. Archana, Lakshmi Saripalli
We report the detection of a large number of optical bursts in the Low Mass X-ray Binary (LMXB) EXO 0748-676 simultaneous with the thermonuclear X-ray bursts. The X-ray and the optical bursts are detected in a long observation of this source with the XMM-Newton observatory. This has increased the number of thermonuclear X-ray bursts in the LMXBs with simultaneous optical detection by several factors. The optical bursts are found to have a linear rise followed by a slow, somewhat exponential decay. Most of the optical bursts have longer rise and decay timescale compared to the corresponding X-ray bursts. We have determined the X-ray and optical excess photon counts in the bursts that allow us to look at the optical to X-ray burst fluence ratio for each burst and the ratio as a function of the X-ray burst intensity and as a function of the orbital phase. The delay between the onset of the X-ray bursts and the onset of the optical bursts have also been measured and is found to have an average value of 3.25 seconds. We do not find any convincing evidence of orbital phase dependence of the following parameters: X-ray to optical delay, rise time of the optical bursts, and optical to X-ray burst intensity ratio as would be expected if the optical bursts were produced by reprocessing from the surface of the secondary star that is facing the compact star. On the other hand, if the optical bursts are produced by reprocessing of the X-rays in the accretion disk, the onset of the bursts is not expected to have a sharp, linear shape as is observed in a few of the bursts in EXO 0748-676. We emphasise the fact that simultaneous optical observations of the X-ray bursts in multiple wavelength bands will enable further detailed investigations of the reprocessing phenomena, including any non-linear effect of the X-ray irradiation.
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http://arxiv.org/abs/1203.1731
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