SRGA J181414.6-225604: A new Galactic symbiotic X-ray binary outburst triggered by an intense mass loss episode of a heavily obscured Mira variable

Abstract

We present the discovery and multi-wavelength characterization of SRGA J181414.6-225604, a Galactic hard X-ray transient discovered during the ongoing SRG/ART-XC sky survey. Using data from the Palomar Gattini-IR survey, we identify a spatially and temporally coincident variable infrared (IR) source, IRAS 18111-2257, and classify it as a very late-type (M7-M8), long period (1502 24 days) and luminous (MK≈ -9.9 0.2) O-rich Mira donor star located at a distance of ≈ 14.6+2.9-2.3 kpc. Combining multi-color photometric data over the last ≈ 25 years, we show that the IR counterpart underwent a recent (starting ≈ 800 days before the X-ray flare) enhanced mass loss (reaching ≈ 2.1 × 10-5 M yr-1) episode resulting in an expanding dust shell obscuring the underlying star. Multi-epoch follow-up from Swift, NICER and NuSTAR reveal a ≈ 200 day long X-ray outburst reaching a peak luminosity of LX ≈ 2.5 × 1036 erg s-1, characterized by a heavily absorbed (N H ≈ 6× 1022 cm-2) X-ray spectrum consistent with an optically thick Comptonized plasma. The X-ray spectral and timing behavior suggest the presence of clumpy wind accretion together with a dense ionized nebula overabundant in silicate material surrounding the compact object. Together, we show that SRGA J181414.6-225604 is a new symbiotic X-ray binary in outburst, triggered by an intense dust formation episode of a highly evolved donor. Our results offer the first direct confirmation for the speculated connection between enhanced late-stage donor mass loss and active lifetimes of the symbiotic X-ray binaries.

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