A Hard-to-Soft State Transition during A Luminosity Decline of Aquila X-1

Abstract

We have discovered a spectral transition from the low/hard (LH) state to the high/soft (HS) state when Aquila X-1 was declining in observations made with the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). The 2--200 keV energy flux corresponding to the state transition is 1.1×10-9 ergs cm-2 s-1, an order of magnitude lower than observed in the past. The 2--200 keV peak flux of the following HS state is 1.6×10-9 ergs cm-2 s-1. The relation between the luminosity of the hard-to-soft state transition and the peak luminosity of the following HS state confirms the linear relation found previously. This implies that the luminosity of the hard-to-soft state transition is not determined solely by the mass accretion rate, but appears to be determined by the peak luminosity of the soft X-ray outburst. We also found that the LH-to-HS state transition occurred at a luminosity similar to that of the corresponding HS-to-LH state transition, i.e., there is no apparent hysteresis. These results provide additional evidence that the mass in the accretion disk affects the luminosity of the hard-to-soft state transition, and that the accretion flow that powers the LH state is related to the accretion flow that powers the HS state at a later time.

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