4.7 Article

Hard state neutron star and black hole X-ray binaries in the radio:X-ray luminosity plane

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 478, Issue 1, Pages L132-L136

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnrasl/sly083

Keywords

methods: statistical; X-rays: binaries; stars: neutron; stars: black holes

Funding

  1. Vidi grant from NWO

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Motivated by the large body of literature around the phenomenological properties of accreting black hole (BH) and neutron star (NS) X-ray binaries in the radio: X-ray luminosity plane, we carry out a comparative regression analysis on 36 BHs and 41 NSs in hard X-ray states, with data over 7 dex in X-ray luminosity for both. The BHs follow a radio to X-ray (logarithmic) luminosity relation with slope beta = 0.59 +/- 0.02, consistent with the NSs' slope (beta = 0.44(-0.04)(+0.05)) within 2.5s. The best-fitting intercept for the BHs significantly exceeds that for the NSs, cementingBHs as more radio loud, by a factor similar to 22. This discrepancy cannot be fully accounted for by the mass or bolometric correction gap, or by the NS boundary layer contribution to the X-rays, and is likely to reflect physical differences in the accretion flow efficiency, or the jet powering mechanism. Once importance sampling is implemented to account for the different luminosity distributions, the slopes of the non-pulsating and pulsating NS subsamples are formally inconsistent (>3 sigma), unless the transitional millisecond pulsars (whose incoherent radio emission mechanism is not firmly established) are excluded from the analysis. We confirm the lack of a robust partitioning of the BH data set into separate luminosity tracks.

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