The optical light curve of the low-mass X-ray binary GX 9 + 9

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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Accretion Disks, Eclipsing Binary Stars, Light Curve, X Ray Binaries, Charge Coupled Devices, Companion Stars, M Stars, Stellar Mass, Stellar Spectrophotometry

Scientific paper

The detection of a small modulation in the light curve of the GX 9 + 9 optical counterpart at the same period as determined from the X-ray data is reported. The optical variability is roughly sinusoidal in shape with a period of 4.198 + or - 0.0094 hours and an average peak-to-peak amplitude in the B of 0.19 mag with comparable amplitudes in the V and R bandpasses, and has superposed flickering with a typical amplitude of six percent. The mass of the companion star is deduced to be 0.4 solar mass, which corresponds to an early M-type star. The bulk of the optical light arises in the accretion disk, while the variability arises from orbital modulation of the light reprocessed off the companion star and a bright spot. It is suggested that the X-ray modulation might be due to the asymmetries of X-rays reflected off the bright spot.

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