The rise of the black hole X-ray binary AT2019wey observed with TESS
Abstract
Black hole X-ray binaries (BHXRBs) have traditionally been discovered by X-ray surveys with cadences of hours to days. However, large optical time-domain surveys now provide novel avenues for early detection and insights into their elusive outburst triggering mechanisms. We present early-time light curves of the BHXRB AT 2019wey serendipitously observed by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). The TESS images are sampled at 30 minute cadence from ≈2 d prior to ≈25 d after outburst, providing the highest time resolution optical rising phase observations of any known BHXRB. We fit a piece-wise power law to the rising light curve, finding an outburst onset time of MJD 58817.860.09 and power-law rise index n=0.740.04. The onset time precedes all ground-based optical detections, and suggests that the optical rise began after the start of the faint X-ray brightening in MAXI data. We search for periodic high frequency modulation and detect none exceeding amplitude ≈0.48 mJy at periods of 1 h at 90% confidence.
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