Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

X-ray binary

An X-ray binary is a binary star system consisting of a compact object—typically a neutron star or black hole, though sometimes a white dwarf—and a companion star from which it accretes matter, heating the infalling material to temperatures exceeding a million degrees Kelvin and producing intense X-ray emission detectable from Earth. These systems form when a massive star in a binary pair evolves and collapses into a compact remnant, while the companion continues to transfer mass through mechanisms such as Roche-lobe overflow or stellar winds, leading to the creation of an accretion disk around the compact object where X-rays are generated via thermal bremsstrahlung and other high-energy processes. X-ray binaries are classified primarily by the mass of the companion star: low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) involve a low-mass companion (typically less than 1–2 solar masses), often a main-sequence star or evolved giant, with accretion primarily via Roche-lobe overflow into a stable disk; in contrast, high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) feature a massive companion (greater than 8–10 solar masses), usually an O or B-type supergiant, where accretion occurs through the companion's strong stellar wind or rarely Roche-lobe overflow. A rarer intermediate-mass category exists for companions between 2 and 8 solar masses. The first X-ray binary, Scorpius X-1 (Sco X-1), was discovered in 1962 during a sounding rocket flight led by Riccardo Giacconi, marking the birth of X-ray astronomy. It is a bright, variable source about 9,000 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius. This LMXB consists of a neutron star accreting from a low-mass companion, emitting X-rays at luminosities up to $10^{38} ergs per second—roughly $10^{11} times brighter than the Sun in X-rays. Subsequent observations, including the 1964 detection of Cygnus X-1, identified the first strong black hole candidate in an HMXB with a 20–40 solar mass companion, demonstrating rapid X-ray variability and confirming the presence of compact objects through orbital dynamics and mass measurements. Over hundreds of known systems in the Milky Way, X-ray binaries serve as key laboratories for studying extreme astrophysics, including accretion physics, thermonuclear bursts on neutron star surfaces, pulsar timing from spinning neutron stars, and the evolution of stellar remnants, while also tracing galactic structure through their distribution—LMXBs often in globular clusters and HMXBs along spiral arms.

Overview

Definition and Characteristics

An X-ray binary is a system consisting of a —typically a or —and a normal companion star, in which from the companion to the compact object leads to the release of energy that heats accreting material to temperatures exceeding 10^7 , producing X-ray emission primarily through and non-thermal processes. These systems are distinguished from other high-energy astrophysical sources, such as active galactic nuclei, by their galactic-scale distances (typically a few kpc) and the dynamical signatures of orbital motion, which manifest in periodic modulations of the emission. The compact object accretes material either via Roche-lobe overflow from the companion or through stellar winds, forming an or flow that powers the X-ray output. Key characteristics of X-ray binaries include X-ray luminosities typically ranging from 10^{36} to 10^{39} erg s^{-1} in the 0.1–100 keV energy band, reflecting the efficiency of accretion onto compact objects of stellar mass. Orbital periods span a wide range, from hours in close systems to years in wider binaries, influencing the mass-transfer rate and emission stability. Spatial distributions vary by subtype: low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) are preferentially found in the galactic bulge and globular clusters, while high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) trace the galactic disk and spiral arms, correlating with recent star formation regions. Observationally, X-ray binaries exhibit either persistent emission or transient outbursts, with flux variability occurring on timescales from milliseconds—such as quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) arising from instabilities in the accretion disk—to days, driven by orbital modulation of the mass-transfer rate. Spectral features often include a soft blackbody component (kT ≈ 0.1–1 keV) from the neutron star surface or boundary layer, alongside a harder power-law continuum (photon index Γ ≈ 1.5–2.5) extending to tens of keV, resulting from Comptonization of seed photons by hot electrons in the accretion flow or corona. Basic system parameters encompass compact object masses of approximately 1.4 M_⊙ for neutron stars and 5–20 M_⊙ for black holes, determined through dynamical measurements like curves and timing. Companion star masses vary significantly by subtype, from <1 M_⊙ in LMXBs to 8–40 M_⊙ in HMXBs, affecting the evolutionary stage and accretion mode, though detailed classifications are addressed elsewhere.

Historical Discovery

The first cosmic X-ray source beyond the solar system, , was detected on June 18, 1962, by a team led by using rocket-borne proportional counters launched from , New Mexico. This unexpected discovery revealed an intense X-ray emitter in the direction of , initially leading to speculation that it might be extragalactic due to its brightness, far exceeding expectations for galactic sources. The finding, detailed in Giacconi et al.'s seminal paper, marked the birth of extragalactic X-ray astronomy and prompted further rocket experiments to map additional faint sources. The launch of the UHURU satellite (Small Astronomy Satellite-1) on December 12, 1970, ushered in the satellite era of , conducting the first all-sky survey and cataloging approximately 160 discrete sources by the end of its operations in 1973. UHURU revealed the binary nature of many sources through observations of X-ray pulsations and eclipses; for instance, was identified as the first in 1971, with 4.8-second pulses indicating a rotating accreting from a companion. Complementary missions like (launched 1974) and (launched 1976) expanded these findings, detecting variable and transient behaviors that solidified as a distinct class powered by . Key milestones in the 1970s included the 1971 identification of as the first strong black hole candidate, based on UHURU and ground-based observations showing a massive, non-pulsing compact object in a binary system. The 1975 outburst of the transient , detected by Ariel 5 at intensities up to 50 times that of the , highlighted the episodic nature of low-mass X-ray binaries and provided early evidence for black hole accretion disks. In the 1980s and 1990s, satellites such as (1983–1986), (1987–1991), and (1990–1999) refined classifications through improved timing and spectral resolution, identifying hundreds of new sources and distinguishing high- and low-mass systems via multi-wavelength correlations. The modern era, beginning with the launches of Chandra in 1999 and XMM-Newton in the same year, enabled high-resolution spectroscopy of X-ray binaries, revealing atomic lines that probe accretion environments and compact object properties. The Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER), deployed in 2017, advanced studies of millisecond pulsars in binaries by detecting thermal X-ray pulsations from sources like PSR J0740+6620, linking spin-up mechanisms to accretion history. The eROSITA instrument on the Spektrum-Roentgen-Gamma (SRG) mission, launched in 2019, completed its first all-sky survey in 2020, with the initial data release in 2024 cataloging about 900,000 X-ray sources and providing enhanced statistics on transients and obscured objects. These developments established X-ray astronomy as a foundational field, directly advancing understandings of neutron stars, black holes, and binary evolution.

Formation and Evolution

Evolutionary Pathways

X-ray binaries form from binary star progenitors that undergo significant dynamical and evolutionary changes to produce a compact object paired with a donor star capable of transferring mass. High-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) typically originate from massive binary systems involving O- or B-type stars with initial primary masses exceeding 8–10 M⊙, where the primary evolves rapidly and undergoes a core-collapse supernova to form a neutron star (NS) or black hole (BH), while the secondary remains a massive companion. Low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs), in contrast, arise from binary progenitors where the initial primary has masses around 8–12 M⊙ (for neutron star systems) or higher for black holes, often involving a common-envelope (CE) phase where the expanding envelope of the evolving primary engulfs the low-mass secondary, leading to orbital shrinkage through angular momentum loss and eventual ejection of the envelope to form a tight orbit with a white dwarf, NS, or BH accretor. These progenitor pathways are shaped by initial separations, mass ratios, and evolutionary timescales, with massive binaries favoring HMXB formation due to their short main-sequence lifetimes of ~10 Myr. Additionally, a substantial fraction of LMXBs form dynamically in globular clusters through tidal capture or exchange interactions involving pre-existing compact objects and donor stars in these dense stellar environments. The CE ejection is particularly crucial for LMXBs to produce the compact orbits necessary for subsequent mass transfer; in these systems, this phase lasts ~10³ years and results in orbital periods of hours to days. HMXBs often form without a CE phase, maintaining wider separations suitable for wind accretion. Key evolutionary phases include the supernova kick imparted to the newborn compact object, which can reach velocities up to 400 km/s and disrupt wide binaries while tightening or eccentricizing closer orbits. Mass transfer initiates the X-ray phase once the donor fills its Roche lobe or loses material via winds, with post-supernova dynamics determining survival: kicks below ~100–200 km/s preserve most bound systems. Evolutionary tracks differ markedly by donor mass. In LMXBs, the track begins with a ~8–10 M⊙ primary evolving into an NS via supernova, paired with a low-mass (<1 M⊙) donor; angular momentum loss through magnetic braking (for convective donors) and gravitational radiation drives orbital shrinkage over ~10⁸ years, leading to stable or intermittent Roche-lobe overflow. HMXBs follow a brief track from massive primaries (~20–40 M⊙) to NS/BH with OB donors, featuring wind accretion or Roche-lobe overflow in a short-lived phase of ~10⁵–10⁶ years before the donor's own supernova disrupts or evolves the system further. Metallicity influences these tracks in HMXBs, with higher metallicity enhancing line-driven winds for wind-fed accretion, while lower metallicity promotes Roche-lobe overflow by reducing wind mass loss. The X-ray luminous phase endures ~10⁸ years in LMXBs, allowing spin-up of NSs to millisecond periods via accretion torques, often ending in detached binaries that merge via gravitational waves detectable by . HMXB phases are shorter (~10⁵–10⁶ years), terminating in double compact objects or mergers, with limited time for extensive recycling. Population synthesis models predict approximately 40 persistent LMXBs and a total population of ~2×10³ LMXBs including transients in the Galactic bulge, consistent with Galaxy-wide estimates of hundreds of systems. These models highlight the rarity of surviving tight binaries post-supernova and the role of initial conditions in matching observed distributions.

Binary Interaction Mechanisms

In X-ray binaries, mass transfer from the donor star to the compact object occurs primarily through two modes: (RLOF) and . RLOF dominates in (LMXBs), where the donor fills its and transfers mass steadily via an accretion disk, sustaining persistent X-ray emission; however, in , this process is unstable, leading to episodic outbursts due to temporary disk accumulation. In (HMXBs), prevails, as the massive donor's strong wind envelops the compact object; the , defining the accretion zone, is typically around $10^{11} cm for typical wind velocities and separations. The mass transfer rate \dot{M} in RLOF systems is approximated as \dot{M} \approx \left( \frac{dR_L}{dt} \right) \frac{M_\mathrm{donor}}{t_\mathrm{KH}}, where R_L is the Roche lobe radius, M_\mathrm{donor} is the donor mass, and t_\mathrm{KH} is the Kelvin-Helmholtz timescale (\sim 10^7 years for low-mass donors), reflecting the donor's response to lobe shrinkage. Orbital evolution during the active phase is driven by angular momentum loss mechanisms, including gravitational waves for short-period systems (P_\mathrm{orb} \sim hours), which cause rapid orbital decay; magnetic braking for longer periods (P_\mathrm{orb} \gtrsim 1 day), spinning down the donor and tightening the orbit; and isotropic re-emission from the accretion disk, ejecting specific angular momentum. The orbital separation a evolves as \frac{da}{dt} \propto -\dot{M} (1 - \beta) \frac{a}{M_\mathrm{total}}, where \beta is the mass transfer efficiency (typically $0 < \beta < 1), indicating contraction if \beta < 1. Accretion disks in these systems are prone to thermal-viscous instabilities, where partial ionization of hydrogen leads to sudden viscosity changes, triggering dwarf nova-like outbursts in soft X-ray transients by ionizing the disk and enabling rapid mass inflow. For neutron star accretors, magnetospheric interactions introduce the propeller effect: when the star's spin is rapid, the co-rotation radius exceeds the Alfvén radius r_A \approx \left( \frac{\mu^4}{2 G M \dot{M}^2} \right)^{1/7}, where \mu is the magnetic moment, M the neutron star mass, and \dot{M} the accretion rate; this expels incoming matter via centrifugal forces, suppressing accretion until spin equilibrium is reached. Typical r_A \sim 10^8 cm for \dot{M} \sim 10^{17} g s^{-1} and \mu \sim 10^{30} G cm³, highlighting the magnetic field's dominance over gas pressure in channeling flow.

System Components and Emission Processes

Compact Objects

In X-ray binaries, the compact primary object is typically either a neutron star or a stellar-mass black hole, each exhibiting distinct physical properties that influence the system's X-ray emission and dynamics. Neutron stars form through the core-collapse supernovae of massive progenitor stars with initial masses exceeding about 8 solar masses (M_\odot), resulting in remnants supported against further collapse by neutron degeneracy pressure. These objects have typical masses in the range of 1.1–2.0 M_\odot, with a median around 1.4 M_\odot, and radii constrained to approximately 10–14 km, reflecting the stiffness of the nuclear equation of state at extreme densities. Neutron stars in these systems possess strong magnetic fields, spanning $10^8–$10^{12} gauss (G), where higher fields (\sim 10^{12} G) are common in young, high-mass X-ray binaries and lower fields (\sim 10^8–$10^9 G) characterize recycled millisecond pulsars in low-mass systems due to field decay from prolonged accretion. Their spin periods vary widely: young neutron stars rotate with periods of seconds, while those in low-mass X-ray binaries can achieve millisecond spins through accretion-induced "recycling," accelerating to periods as short as 1–2 ms. Stellar-mass black holes, by contrast, arise from the final stages of massive stars (initial masses \gtrsim 20 M_\odot) via failed supernovae or direct collapse when the iron core exceeds the Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff limit, avoiding a successful explosion and forming a singularity enveloped by an event horizon. In X-ray binaries, these black holes have masses generally between 3 and 100 M_\odot, though dynamically confirmed examples cluster around 5–15 M_\odot, distinguishing them from neutron stars by exceeding the maximum neutron star mass. The event horizon marks the inescapable boundary, with a Schwarzschild radius of r_s = 2GM/c^2 \approx 3 km (M/M_\odot), while the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) for non-spinning (Schwarzschild) black holes lies at $6GM/c^2 \approx 9 km (M/M_\odot), setting the inner boundary for stable accretion flows and influencing disk truncation and emission efficiency. Spinning (Kerr) black holes can have ISCO radii as small as GM/c^2 for maximal prograde spin (a^* = 1), allowing deeper accretion and higher luminosities. Distinguishing neutron stars from black holes in X-ray binaries relies on observational signatures tied to their structures. For neutron stars, coherent X-ray pulsations at frequencies of 1–1000 Hz arise from rotation-modulated emission hotspots on the magnetized surface, directly revealing the object's spin and magnetic field. Thermonuclear (type I) X-ray bursts, triggered by unstable hydrogen/helium ignition on the surface, further confirm neutron stars with burst energies \sim 10^{39} erg and peak luminosities approaching the Eddington limit. Cyclotron resonance scattering features in the X-ray spectrum provide a direct probe of magnetic fields, with the line energy given by E_\mathrm{cyc} = 11.6 \, \mathrm{keV} \times B_{12}, where B_{12} is the field strength in units of $10^{12} G. Black holes, lacking a solid surface or intrinsic magnetic field, show no such pulsations, bursts, or cyclotron lines; instead, their presence is inferred from high luminosities exceeding the neutron star Eddington limit, L > L_\mathrm{Edd} \approx 1.4 \times 10^{38} (M/M_\odot) \, \mathrm{erg/s}, where sustained super-Eddington accretion is possible without surface effects. Accretion onto these compact objects imparts significant spin evolution. For neutron stars, the material torque drives spin-up, approximated as \tau \approx \dot{M} \sqrt{G M r_m}, where \dot{M} is the mass accretion rate, M the neutron star mass, and r_m the magnetospheric radius where balances magnetic pressure; this torque recycles the star, shortening its period over gigayears in low-mass systems. Warping in the can enhance this torque by altering magnetic threading, favoring net spin-up even at moderate accretion rates. Black hole spins, parameterized by a^* (dimensionless, $0 \leq |a^*| \leq 1), are inferred from relativistic effects in X-ray reflection spectra, particularly the gravitationally redshifted and broadened iron K\alpha fluorescence line at 6.4 keV emitted from the illuminated inner disk, whose profile encodes the radius and thus a^*. High-spin black holes (a^* \gtrsim 0.8) dominate observed samples, enabling efficient energy extraction via the Blandford-Znajek process or in the accretion flow. Recent observations have refined these properties through advanced instrumentation. NASA's Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) has provided equation-of-state constraints via pulse profile modeling, yielding a radius of approximately 12 km (median 12.1 ± 0.5 km at 68% confidence) for a 1.4 M_\odot object, consistent with stiff models and ruling out softer equations of state. All-sky surveys with eROSITA aboard SRG, complemented by infrared follow-up from JWST, have uncovered numerous new candidates, including several potential stellar-mass systems through optical counterparts and variability analysis, expanding the Galactic population sample.

Accretion and Donor Stars

In binaries, the donor star is the that supplies mass to the compact accretor through various mechanisms. These donors span a wide range of evolutionary stages, including main-sequence stars, giants, and stripped-core remnants, with masses typically between 0.1 and 50 solar masses (⊙). In high-mass binaries (HMXBs), donors are often or spectral type stars, such as supergiants or Be stars, with masses exceeding 8 ⊙. In contrast, low-mass binaries (LMXBs) feature later-type or donors, usually with masses below 1 ⊙, which are more evolved and compact. Accretion onto the occurs via distinct geometries depending on the donor's properties and separation. In HMXBs, direct accretion predominates, where clumpy stellar winds from the massive donor are captured by the compact object's ; the capture r_c is approximately r_c \approx \frac{2GM}{v_\mathrm{[wind](/page/Wind)}^2}, with v_\mathrm{wind} being the velocity, leading to X-ray luminosities scaling as L_x \approx \frac{G M \dot{M}}{R}, where R is the of the , and \dot{M} is the accretion rate. In LMXBs, forms viscous accretion disks, modeled by the Shakura-Sunyaev α-disk framework, where radial temperature profiles follow T \propto r^{-3/4} due to viscous heating balancing in a geometrically thin, optically thick flow. The geometry of is governed by the potential, which defines the surface enclosing each star; overflow occurs when the donor expands beyond its , channeling material through the inner point toward the accretor. In systems with (NS) accretors, the disk is often truncated at the magnetospheric radius, where magnetic pressure halts further inflow, typically at a few times the NS radius. Equatorial decretion disks around Be donors in HMXBs provide episodic mass supply, though their detailed structure is addressed elsewhere. For overflow, is driven by the donor's nuclear evolution, which expands its , or by orbital shrinkage from loss. Wind mass-loss rates from O/B donors follow empirical relations such as \dot{M}_\mathrm{wind} \approx 10^{-9} \left( \frac{L}{L_\odot} \right)^{1.5} \left( \frac{v}{v_\mathrm{esc}} \right)^{-2} M⊙ yr⁻¹, where L is the donor , v the wind speed, and v_\mathrm{esc} the . X-ray emission from the accretor can influence the donor through feedback effects. by the central source heats the donor's outer layers, inducing thermal bloating that enhances overflow or drives additional mass loss via enhanced winds. In super-Eddington accretion regimes, where \dot{M} exceeds the Eddington limit, powerful outflows are launched from the disk or , expelling excess material and regulating the inflow.

X-ray Production Mechanisms

In X-ray binaries, the primary mechanism for X-ray production is the release of gravitational potential energy as matter from the companion star accretes onto the compact object, either a (NS) or (BH). The energy liberated per unit mass accreted is approximately \Delta E \approx GM/R, where G is the , M is the mass of the compact object, and R is its characteristic radius (or the for BHs). For typical NSs with M \approx 1.4 M_\odot and R \approx 10 km, this corresponds to \Delta E \sim 0.2-0.5 c^2 (fraction of the rest-mass energy per unit accreted mass), while for non-spinning BHs with M \approx 10 M_\odot, it is \sim 0.1 c^2. The radiative efficiency \eta—the fraction of this rest-mass energy converted to radiation—reaches \eta \approx 0.1 for standard thin accretion disks around both NSs and BHs, but can approach \eta \approx 0.5 when material impacts the NS surface directly, as the full potential is released there. The X-rays are emitted from distinct regions shaped by the accretion geometry. In the inner accretion disk, a multi-temperature blackbody arises from viscous , with characteristic temperatures kT \sim 1 keV near the inner edge, producing soft X-rays that dominate in high-luminosity "soft" states. For NSs, the —where the disk flow slows to match the star's —emits harder via shocks or Comptonization in a hot (kT \sim 2-5 keV) , often modeled as a power-law tail with photon index \Gamma \sim 1.5-2.5. A Comptonizing above the disk can scatter soft photons to higher energies, enhancing the hard X-ray component in "hard" states. On NS surfaces, unstable thermonuclear ignition of accreted / layers triggers type-I X-ray bursts, releasing fluences of \sim 10^{39}-10^{40} erg in seconds, with blackbody-like spectra peaking at \sim 2-3 keV. Spectral modeling captures these processes effectively. The thermal disk emission follows a multi-color blackbody approximation, given by F_E \propto E^{2} \exp\left(-\frac{E}{kT_{\rm in}}\right), where T_{\rm in} is the inner disk , describing the soft-state up to \sim 10 keV before an cutoff. Hard states combine this with non-thermal Comptonized spectra, yielding hybrid thermal-nonthermal models with power-law indices \Gamma \sim 1.5-2.5 extending to \sim 100 keV. In BH systems, relativistic effects near the event horizon broaden iron lines and produce disk reflection features, such as a Compton hump at \sim 20-30 keV, due to and off the illuminated disk. Temporal variability reflects dynamical instabilities in these regions. Quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) at kilohertz frequencies (200-1200 Hz) arise from disk instabilities or orbital motion near the innermost stable orbit, with separated by \sim 300 Hz often linked to the compact object's spin or beat frequencies in systems. Flares on shorter timescales (\sim seconds to minutes) occur in high-mass X-ray binaries due to variable accretion from clumpy stellar winds, causing luminosity spikes up to factors of 10. In low/hard states, particularly for BHs, emission from relativistic jets contributes non-thermal radio-to- continua, while in intense magnetic or fields can generate high-energy photons in coronal plasmas.

Classification

By Donor Star Mass

X-ray binaries are primarily classified by the mass of the donor star, which dictates the system's evolutionary , accretion , and observational . Low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) feature donors with masses below –2 M_\odot, typically main-sequence or evolved late-type stars such as K or M dwarfs or subgiants. Intermediate-mass X-ray binaries (IMXBs) involve donors in the 2–8 M_\odot range, often subgiants or giants of intermediate types. High-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) have donors exceeding 8–10 M_\odot, usually massive O or B supergiants or main-sequence stars. This classification carries significant implications for accretion processes and spatial distributions. LMXBs predominantly exhibit Roche-lobe overflow leading to stable disk accretion, and they are concentrated in the and center, reflecting their association with older stellar populations. HMXBs favor wind accretion from the dense stellar winds of massive companions, resulting in more variable emission, and are preferentially located along spiral arms near active star-forming regions. IMXBs represent a transitional category, displaying hybrid behaviors such as intermittent disk formation or wind-driven episodes. In the , population statistics highlight these distinctions: approximately 339 LMXBs (including candidates) and 169 HMXBs have been catalogued, while IMXBs remain scarce with fewer than 20 confirmed systems. functions further differentiate the classes, with LMXBs peaking around $10^{37} erg s^{-1} and exhibiting a sharp cutoff, whereas HMXBs show a broader distribution spanning $10^{36}–$10^{38} erg s^{-1}. Evolutionary connections tie these populations to stellar ages. LMXBs originate from older galactic components with ages exceeding 1 Gyr, as their low-mass donors evolve slowly on the before Roche-lobe overflow. In contrast, HMXBs trace young environments with lifetimes under 10 , linked to recent massive . IMXBs bridge these timescales, often evolving from intermediate-mass progenitors in intermediate-age fields. Observational diagnostics rely on multiwavelength data to identify donor types. Optical and infrared spectra reveal cool atmospheres in LMXBs through absorption features like TiO bands near 7000–7600 , indicative of M-type stars. Spatial correlations further aid , with LMXBs overrepresented in globular clusters, comprising up to 10% of such systems despite their rarity in the field.

By Phenomenological Properties

X-ray binaries are classified phenomenologically based on their observed temporal and spectral behaviors, which reflect variations in accretion dynamics and emission processes independent of donor star mass. Persistent sources maintain relatively steady luminosities over long periods, typically due to continuous accretion at a stable rate, as exemplified by Scorpius X-1, which exhibits quasi-steady emission at luminosities around 10^{38} erg/s. In contrast, transient systems spend most of their time in quiescence with low output, punctuated by recurrent outbursts lasting weeks to months, where luminosities can reach 10^{36-38} erg/s; transients often have duty cycles below 1%, meaning outbursts occur every few years or decades. These outbursts in transients are driven by thermal-viscous instabilities in the , leading to sudden increases in rates. Spectral states provide another key phenomenological classification, particularly for systems with black holes or weakly magnetized neutron stars. The soft state is dominated by thermal emission from the inner , peaking at lower energies (around 1 keV) with high accretion rates and minimal Comptonization, often accompanied by strong disk winds. Conversely, the hard state features a power-law spectrum from Compton upscattering of soft photons by a hot corona, occurring at lower accretion rates and associated with compact jet production. A very high state, intermediate between soft and hard, shows prominent quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) and increased variability, marking transitions where the disk approaches the . These states are traced in hardness-intensity diagrams, revealing hysteresis loops during outbursts as the source evolves between them. Behaviormetrics further delineate systems based on accretion mode signatures in light curves and color-color diagrams. Wind-fed systems, common in high-mass binaries, display irregular variability due to clumpy stellar winds, resulting in luminosity fluctuations on timescales of hours to days. Roche-lobe overflow systems, typically low-mass binaries, exhibit more stable accretion during quiescence but can show dwarf nova-like outbursts or type I bursts from accumulated material. In color-color diagrams, systems trace distinct paths: Z sources follow a Z-shaped track with branches representing normal, horizontal, and flaring branches tied to varying mass accretion rates, while sources form banana-shaped or island-like patterns, reflecting harder spectra and lower accretion states. These tracks illustrate state transitions, with diagonal branches in sources indicating Comptonization dominance. Pulse and burst classifications highlight timing properties in neutron star systems. X-ray pulsars feature coherent pulsations from rotationally modulated emission on magnetized s with surface fields exceeding 10^{12} , where the channels accretion to polar caps, producing pulsed luminosities up to 10^{38} erg/s. Bursters, on the other hand, undergo sudden thermonuclear flashes on the surface when accreted / ignites, releasing energy in short (10-100 s) bursts with peak fluxes reaching Eddington limits, often recurring on hours to days. and sources differ in their timing noise, with sources showing stronger low-frequency variability linked to higher accretion rates. Recent phenomenological advances, up to 2025, have expanded transient catalogs and multi-wavelength insights. The eROSITA all-sky survey has identified hundreds of new Galactic transients, including flaring X-ray binaries with peak luminosities distinguishing thermal from non-thermal emitters, enhancing outburst statistics. Multi-wavelength campaigns have solidified the radio-X-ray correlation in hard-state black hole systems, where radio luminosity scales as L_radio ∝ L_X^{0.7}, linking jet production to accretion inefficiency and enabling distance-independent mass estimates. These observations underscore how phenomenological behaviors, like state-linked jets, unify diverse systems beyond mass classifications.

Types by Donor Mass

Low-Mass X-ray Binaries

Low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) consist of a , typically a , accreting material from a low-mass companion star with a mass in the range of 0.1–1 M_\odot, often a K- or M-type dwarf or a white dwarf. These systems exhibit short orbital periods, generally between 1 and 24 hours, with some ultracompact binaries having periods as brief as under 80 minutes. They are predominantly found in dense environments such as the Galactic bulge and globular clusters, with a small but significant number (around a dozen to twenty) residing in globular clusters out of over 300 known systems, where dynamical interactions facilitate their formation. The X-ray luminosities of these systems typically range from $10^{36} to $10^{38} erg s^{-1}, arising from steady or episodic accretion onto the compact object. LMXBs display a range of behaviors characterized by their accretion states and variability. Persistent sources, such as and Z-sources, maintain relatively steady X-ray emission, while transients, known as soft X-ray transients, undergo outbursts recurring every 10–100 years, often entering long quiescent phases. Many LMXBs exhibit frequent type-I thermonuclear X-ray bursts due to unstable / burning on the surface, and they often show variability, including quasi-periodic oscillations and accreting X-ray pulsars. These behaviors are driven by Roche-lobe overflow from the donor, leading to the formation of an that dominates the X-ray emission through viscous dissipation and Comptonization in a . In an evolutionary context, LMXBs form through prolonged episodes from the low-mass donor, which spins up the to millisecond periods, recycling it into a progenitor. In globular clusters, dynamical encounters such as tidal captures or exchanges are responsible for forming the LMXBs in these environments, enhancing their abundance relative to the field population. Over time, these systems may evolve into quiescent low-mass X-ray binaries or detached binaries detectable as sources. Prominent examples include X-1 (Sco X-1), the brightest known persistent LMXB and a prototypical Z-source with approaching the Eddington limit for neutron stars. Another is 4U 1820−30, an ultracompact binary in the NGC 6624 with an of just 11 minutes and a hydrogen-depleted donor. Aquila X-1 (Aql X-1) exemplifies a bursting transient, showing frequent type-I bursts and recurrent outbursts every few months to years. Recent observations up to 2025 have advanced understanding of LMXB geometries through Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) measurements, which reveal degrees and angles indicating in accretion disk-corona configurations, as seen in sources like GX 9+9 and Z-sources. Additionally, proper motions and parallaxes have refined the Galactic population census, providing distances and kinematical insights for over 90 LMXBs, highlighting their distribution and origins.

Intermediate-Mass X-ray Binaries

Intermediate-mass X-ray binaries (IMXBs) feature donor stars with masses typically ranging from 2 to 7 solar masses (M⊙), often subgiants or systems resembling Algol binaries, which provide material to a compact accretor via Roche-lobe overflow or stellar winds. These systems exhibit orbital periods of several days to months, with luminosities in the band varying between approximately 10^{34} and 10^{37} erg s^{-1}, and they are predominantly located in the galactic disk due to their formation from relatively massive progenitors. Their accretion behavior is semi-persistent, combining phases of Roche-lobe overflow with contributions from donor winds, leading to moderate thermonuclear bursts and spectra with hardness levels intermediate between those of low-mass and high-mass binaries. In evolutionary terms, IMXBs serve as a transitional bridging low-mass and high-mass binaries, originating from binary systems with initial primary masses around 10 M⊙ that undergo common-envelope , resulting in a and an intermediate-mass donor. The active phase is brief, lasting about 10^7 years, as the donor rapidly evolves off the , limiting the duration of significant . Theoretical models emphasize this rapid as a key factor in the scarcity of IMXBs, predicting low formation rates due to the narrow parameter space for stable in post-common-envelope systems. Prominent examples include Her X-1, an eclipsing system with a ~2 M⊙ donor (HZ Her) and a 1.24 s , exhibiting variable emission modulated by a 35-day precessing disk and partial wind absorption. Another is 4U 1210-64, a Be-like IMXB with a 6.7-day and evidence of hybrid wind and disk accretion, recently confirmed as a member of this rare subclass through optical revealing an intermediate-mass companion. These systems highlight the transitional dynamics of IMXBs, with behaviors akin to lower-mass analogs of high-mass systems like Vela X-1 but at reduced donor masses. Fewer than 10 confirmed IMXBs are known, underscoring their rarity compared to other X-ray binary classes. Recent observations with have revealed partial wind absorption in spectra, such as in Her X-1, where clumpy outflows modulate the emission and provide insights into accretion geometry. Up to 2025, these findings, combined with population synthesis models, continue to challenge predictions of IMXB prevalence, attributing their low numbers to efficient loss and donor evolution timescales.

High-Mass X-ray Binaries

High-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) consist of a , typically a or , accreting material from a massive donor star with a mass exceeding 8 masses (M⊙), usually an or or . These systems exhibit orbital periods ranging from days to years, with X-ray luminosities typically between 10^{35} and 10^{38} erg s^{-1}, powered by accretion from the donor's or Roche-lobe overflow. HMXBs are predominantly found in the spiral arms of galaxies, where active provides the young, massive stellar populations necessary for their formation. The observational behaviors of HMXBs are characterized by high variability and often transient X-ray emission, driven by inhomogeneities or "clumps" in the donor star's radiatively driven wind, which lead to fluctuating accretion rates onto the . Many HMXBs host X-ray pulsars—accreting stars with spin periods typically ranging from a few seconds to over 1000 seconds—whose pulsed emission arises from the beamed radiation at the magnetic poles. Spectral features such as scattering lines, appearing at energies of 10–100 keV, provide direct probes of the star's strengths, typically 10^{12}–10^{13} gauss. Evolutionarily, HMXBs represent young systems, with ages less than 10 million years, formed from the rapid evolution of massive stars where the initially more massive companion has already undergone collapse to form the . occurs primarily through the donor's strong , with rates around 10^{-8} M⊙ yr^{-1}, sustaining the X-ray emission over short lifetimes before the donor evolves into a . These systems may culminate in a double explosion or, in rare cases, the merger into a Thorne-Żytkow object—a hypothetical embedded in an expanded envelope. Their association with massive star evolution links HMXBs to broader phenomena, including long-duration gamma-ray bursts potentially arising from events during the donor's terminal collapse in close binaries. Prominent examples include X-3 (Cen X-3), the first discovered eclipsing HMXB, featuring a orbiting an O6-8 with a 2.09-day period and prominent eclipses revealing structure. exemplifies wind-fed accretion, with a 283-second orbiting a B0.5 at 13.5 days, showing strong variability from clumping. serves as a archetypal HMXB candidate, accreting from an O9.7 with a 5.6-day orbit and persistent high . Recent observations have expanded our understanding of HMXB populations; the eROSITA all-sky survey (eRASS1), completed in 2021, identified numerous new Galactic X-ray transients, including high-mass systems, significantly increasing the known catalog through its sensitivity to variable sources. surveys have mapped obscured HMXB populations, detecting over 100 such systems in hard X-rays (20–100 keV) and revealing a with high columns, often linked to dense circumstellar .

Special Subtypes

Be/X-ray Binaries

Be/X-ray binaries (BeXRBs) represent a major subclass of high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs), comprising approximately 50% of known systems in the . These systems feature a donor, typically a main-sequence star of spectral type B0–B3e with rapid rotation near its critical velocity, surrounded by an equatorial decretion disk formed through viscous transport of material ejected from the star. The compact companion is invariably a (NS), and the binary orbits are wide and eccentric, with orbital periods P_\mathrm{orb} ranging from 10 to 100 days, facilitating episodic interactions between the NS and the Be disk. These binaries are predominantly transient X-ray sources, exhibiting recurrent outbursts tied to the orbital geometry. Giant outbursts, reaching luminosities up to $10^{39} erg s^{-1}, occur when the NS passes through the dense inner Be disk near periastron, capturing substantial material. Normal (Type I) outbursts, with luminosities around $10^{37} erg s^{-1}, are shorter and more frequent, also peaking at periastron but involving less disk material. Nearly all BeXRBs display pulsed X-ray emission from the rotating NS, with spin periods ranging from milliseconds to hundreds of seconds, providing direct evidence of the NS nature and allowing studies of evolution. The primary accretion mechanism involves material from the Be star's viscous decretion disk, which extends to radii of approximately 100 stellar radii (R_*) before truncation by tidal torques from the NS companion. During outbursts, accreted material forms a temporary disk around the NS, leading to torque-induced spin-up via transfer; between outbursts, the effect can dominate, ejecting material and causing spin-down if the NS corotation radius exceeds the magnetospheric radius. Transitions between accretion and propeller regimes explain the variability in outburst profiles and NS spin changes observed in these systems. BeXRBs form through the of massive binaries where the initially more massive star undergoes a explosion, producing the with a natal kick that can circularize or align the with the Be progenitor's axis. The surviving companion, spun up by prior , develops rapid conducive to decretion disk formation via equatorial mass loss. The Be phase, during which the disk enables X-ray outbursts, lasts approximately $10^6 years, limited by the donor's main-sequence lifetime and disk instability cycles. Prominent examples include A0535+262, a 1.3 s in a 111-day eccentric around a B0Ve star, known for bright giant outbursts exceeding $10^{38} erg s^{-1}. GX 301-2 features an obscured with combined and disk accretion, showing periodic flares modulated by its 681-day and dense circumstellar material. Recent observations by the SRG/ART-XC telescope have detected new transients, such as the 2025 outburst of the BeXRB XTE J0111.2-7317 (SXP 31.0), highlighting ongoing discoveries of these s. BeXRBs can be categorized into pure disk-fed systems, where accretion is dominated by the decretion disk, and mixed subtypes involving additional contributions, as seen in a minority of cases with persistent low-level emission. Optical-X-ray correlations are evident, with the H\alpha , tracing disk density, positively correlating with luminosity during outbursts, while excess reflects disk extension.

Microquasars

Microquasars are a subclass of binaries characterized by the presence of relativistic jets emanating from a , either a stellar-mass or , accreting material from a companion star. These systems exhibit bipolar outflows with speeds ranging from 0.1c to 0.9c, producing radio lobes and compact cores detectable through high-resolution imaging. Approximately 20 microquasars are known as of 2025, predominantly low-mass binaries (LMXBs) involving or with low-mass donors. The jets are powered by accretion processes analogous to those in quasars but scaled to stellar dimensions, making microquasars valuable laboratories for studying relativistic phenomena on Galactic scales. The physics of jets is closely tied to the accretion state, with prominent jet activity occurring during the hard spectral state at low accretion rates (\dot{M}). In this regime, jets form via mechanisms such as the Blandford-Znajek process or magnetized disk winds, launching plasma that emits from relativistic electrons in magnetic fields. The optically thin spectrum typically follows S_\nu \propto \nu^{-0.7}, producing flat or inverted radio spectra for compact components. Discrete jet ejections are observed during outburst phases, with (VLBI) measurements revealing ejection speeds up to 0.9c and apparent superluminal motions as high as 1.4c in projection. Microquasars display distinct jet behaviors, including steady compact with inverted radio spectra during quiescent hard states and transient ballistic that expand and decelerate after launch. A key observational signature is the tight correlation between radio and luminosities in the hard state, L_R \propto L_X^{0.7}, linking jet power to emission and supporting models where both arise from inefficient accretion flows. In soft spectral states, jets are quenched, with radio emission dropping by factors of 10–100, likely due to the dominance of a thermal disk and suppression of the or inner jet base. This state-dependent behavior highlights the role of accretion geometry in jet production. Evolutionarily, microquasars often represent "recycled" black holes from LMXBs, where prolonged spins up the and enables efficient launching. Jet quenching in soft states aligns with transitions to efficient, radiatively dominated accretion, while some systems show connections to gamma-ray binaries through hadronic interactions in . Recent models emphasize spin as a driver of jet speed and power, with prograde spins facilitating faster outflows. Prominent examples include GRS 1915+105, the first identified in 1994, which exhibits superluminal jets and "heartbeat" oscillations in its flux due to limit-cycle accretion instability. features precessing jets moving at 0.26c, driven by a tilted in a high-mass system, with recent gamma-ray detections confirming particle acceleration to TeV energies. , an ultracompact binary with a Wolf-Rayet donor and orbital period of ~4.8 hours, shows frequent giant radio flares from jet ejections interacting with the dense . Advances through 2025 have refined our understanding via and multi-wavelength campaigns. MeerKAT and VLA observations have resolved jet launches and interactions, such as a bow shock near GRS 1915+105 induced by jet-ISM coupling, revealing overpressured cavities on parsec scales. Fermi-LAT has detected persistent GeV emission from systems like GRS 1915+105, indicating inverse Compton upscattering in jets, while models increasingly tie jet properties to black hole spin measurements from . In November 2025, the LHAASO observatory detected PeV-energy gamma rays from several microquasars, confirming their role as powerful particle accelerators in the . These developments underscore microquasars' role in bridging stellar and jet physics.

Be-White Dwarf Binaries

Be-white dwarf binaries represent a rare subclass of binaries, featuring a accretor with masses typically ranging from 0.5 to 1.2 M_\odot drawing material from a rapidly rotating donor. These systems emit X-rays primarily in the soft band (0.1–10 keV) at luminosities of approximately 10^{33}–10^{35} erg s^{-1} during quiescent states, often resembling symbiotic binaries but distinguished by the Be star's decretion disk. As of 2025, only about seven confirmed candidates are known, predominantly in the , with detections facilitated by surveys like , , and eROSITA that reveal their thermal, supersoft spectra indicative of surface heating rather than hard Comptonized emission. Observationally, these binaries exhibit persistent or mildly variable X-ray fluxes, punctuated by short outbursts akin to cataclysmic variables, driven by instabilities in the or wind-fed episodes. Unlike counterparts, no coherent pulsations are observed, as dwarfs generally lack (B \gtrsim 10^{12} ) needed for channeling accretion into beams. The overall emission is UV- and optically dominated by the Be star's and emission lines, with X-rays contributing a minor fraction and showing blackbody-like spectra from the dwarf's heated atmosphere (kT \approx 50–100 ). Recent eROSITA have uncovered obscured candidates through their distinctive soft photospheric signatures, them from harder systems. The primary accretion mechanism involves capture of material from the Be star's equatorial decretion disk or polar wind, which spirals inward to impact the white dwarf's surface, producing thermal X-rays via shock heating or nuclear burning. Outbursts can escalate to super-Eddington luminosities (up to \sim10^{39} erg s^{-1}) over days, resembling very fast novae triggered by hydrogen shell ignition, though less energetic than classical novae due to the lower accretion rates. Accretion efficiency is reduced compared to neutron stars or black holes, owing to the white dwarf's larger radius (\sim0.01 R_\mathrm{NS}), which spreads impact energy and favors soft emission over hard power-law tails. Evolutionarily, these systems arise from intermediate-mass progenitors (initial masses \sim4–8 M_\odot for the primary) where the more massive star sheds its envelope to form a without a , avoiding orbital disruption. The surviving , spun up during , gradually loses through disk torques or tidal interactions, leading to spin-down over gigayears. At higher accretion rates, they connect to supersoft sources via stable shell burning on the white dwarf, potentially evolving toward recurrent novae or progenitors if mass approaches the . Population synthesis models predict their scarcity in the Galaxy due to low formation probabilities and short observable lifetimes. Prominent examples include CXOU J005245.0−722844 in the Small Magellanic Cloud, an eclipsing system with a 17.55-day featuring a super-Eddington outburst in 2024 interpreted as an ultraluminous from disk instability. Similarly, Swift J011511.0−725611 displays a 24.4-day period and soft thermal spectrum confirming a accretor. Earlier candidates like MAXI J0158−744 in the Large Magellanic Cloud showed luminous supersoft flares potentially from Be disk overflow, while eROSITA has flagged additional obscured systems via soft excess in Be star fields. These differ from Be/ binaries by their lack of pulsed, hard transients and emphasis on thermal signatures.

References

  1. [1]
    Imagine the Universe! - X-ray Binary Stars
    Sep 23, 2021 · X-ray binaries are made up of a normal star and a collapsed star (a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole).
  2. [2]
    X-ray Binaries
    X-ray binaries contain a collapsed, compact star at the end of its evolution (a neutron star or black hole), accreting material from a more normal star as the ...
  3. [3]
  4. [4]
    High-Mass X-ray binary: Classification, Formation, and Evolution
    A high mass X-ray binary is a binary system consisting of an accreting neutron star or black hole and an early-type star with more than 10 solar masses.
  5. [5]
    Early Observation of Sco X-1 - HEASARC - NASA
    Jun 26, 2003 · Sco X-1, the first cosmic X-ray source (other than the Sun) ever detected, was discovered on June 18, 1962 by a team led by Riccardo Giacconi.
  6. [6]
    [PDF] Class 12 : X-ray binaries and the discovery of black holes
    II : Early History of X-ray astronomy. • Sounding rocket flights… • 1949 : Launch of X-ray detector on a V2-rocket; first detection of X-rays from Sun. • 1962 ...
  7. [7]
    [PDF] Advances in Understanding High-Mass X-ray Binaries with ...
    Jul 12, 2020 · High mass X-ray binaries are among the brightest X-ray sources in the Milky Way, as well as in nearby Galaxies. Thanks to their highly variable ...
  8. [8]
    [2308.02645] High-mass X-ray Binaries - arXiv
    Aug 4, 2023 · Binary systems in which a neutron star or black hole accretes material from a high-mass star are known as high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs).
  9. [9]
    [2206.10053] Low-Mass X-ray Binaries - arXiv
    Jun 21, 2022 · A large fraction of X-ray sources in our Galaxy are low-mass X-ray binaries, containing a black hole or a neutron star accreting from a gravitationally bound ...
  10. [10]
    Evidence for x Rays From Sources Outside the Solar System
    Evidence for x Rays From Sources Outside the Solar System. Riccardo Giacconi, Herbert Gursky, and Frank R. ... 9, 439 – Published 1 December, 1962. DOI: https:// ...
  11. [11]
    The Uhuru Satellite - HEASARC
    Sep 24, 2020 · Uhuru, also known as SAS-1, was the first earth-orbiting mission for celestial X-ray astronomy, launched in 1970 and operated until 1973. It ...
  12. [12]
    Discovery of Periodic X-Ray Pulsations in Centaurus X-3 from UHURU
    The X-ray spectrum shows evidence of substantial absorption below 3.8 keV. Publication: The Astrophysical Journal. Pub Date: July 1971; DOI: 10.1086/180762.
  13. [13]
    The History of X-ray Astronomy: The Rough and Tumble Early Days
    Sep 15, 2021 · First identified as an X-ray source in 1965, follow-up observations in 1973 by the US-UK Copernicus satellite provided strong evidence that ...
  14. [14]
    [PDF] Cygnus X-1: The First Black Hole - High Energy Astrophysics
    Nov 17, 1971 · Westerbork observes Cyg X-1 (Braes & Miley 1971). ... Of course, it also soon became the strongest candidate for a stellar mass black hole.
  15. [15]
    Discovery of powerful transient X-ray source A0620—00 with Ariel V ...
    Oct 23, 1975 · A faint new X-ray source was discovered (at 15 Ariel counts s −1 ) near the boundary of the Monoceros and Orion constellations and 6° from the galactic plane.Missing: outburst | Show results with:outburst
  16. [16]
    The History of X-ray Astronomy: Moving Toward the Modern Era
    Sep 15, 2021 · EXOSAT, built by the European Space Agency and launched in 1983, zoomed in on the higher-energy part of the X-ray spectrum. One major discovery ...
  17. [17]
    X-ray Astronomy Satellites & Missions - Imagine the Universe! - NASA
    Dec 11, 2018 · In the 1990s the ROSAT survey detected more than 100,000 X-ray objects, the ASCA mission made the first sensitive measurements of the X-ray ...
  18. [18]
    High-Resolution X-Ray Spectroscopy with Chandra and XMM-Newton
    Sep 1, 2003 · We review the essential characteristics of these instruments, the basics of X-ray spectral formation in cosmic sources, and the exciting new results.
  19. [19]
    NICER Detection of Thermal X-Ray Pulsations from the Massive ...
    Sep 8, 2021 · We report the detection of X-ray pulsations from the rotation-powered millisecond-period pulsars PSR J0740+6620 and PSR J1614−2230, two of the ...
  20. [20]
    The SRG/eROSITA all-sky survey. First X-ray catalogues and data ...
    The eROSITA telescope array aboard the Spektrum Roentgen Gamma (SRG) satellite began surveying the sky in December 2019, with the aim of producing all-sky X-ray ...
  21. [21]
    None
    Below is a merged summary of the evolutionary pathways, progenitors, phases, and timescales for High-Mass X-ray Binaries (HMXBs), consolidating all information from the provided segments into a dense and comprehensive format. To maximize detail and clarity, I will use a table in CSV format for key data points, followed by a narrative summary that integrates all remaining information. This ensures no detail is lost while maintaining readability.
  22. [22]
    [PDF] Investigating stellar-mass black hole kicks - Radboud Repository
    Jun 20, 2012 · It has long been known that neutron stars receive kicks at birth in the range ∼ 200 − 400 km/s (so called natal kicks), when they are ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  23. [23]
    Effects of metallicity on high-mass X-ray binary formation
    Oct 21, 2019 · Our results suggest that HMXB production is enhanced at low metallicity, and consequently that HMXBs may have contributed significantly to the ...
  24. [24]
    Population synthesis of classical low-mass X-ray binaries in the ...
    We predict the existence of ~40 persistent LMXBs and, at any given time, ~20 transient LMXBs in outburst in the Galactic Bulge. These numbers are not very ...
  25. [25]
    Accretion Instability in Soft X-Ray Transients - IOP Science
    ABSTRACT. Dwarf nova outbursts are likely caused by a thermal-viscous instability in the accretion disk around the white dwarf, which can occur if the mass ...
  26. [26]
    Wind Roche lobe overflow in high-mass X-ray binaries
    This mass transfer mechanism known as “wind Roche lobe overflow” can remain stable even for large donor-star-to-accretor mass ratios.
  27. [27]
    [PDF] Mass Transfer Mechanisms and Mass Transfer Rates in Binaries
    Mass transfer occurs via Roche-lobe overflow and stellar wind accretion. The mass transfer rate can be ~0.8M/τ(thermal) or ~10 to 100 times higher than ...
  28. [28]
    [PDF] Origin and evolution of X-ray binaries
    X-ray binaries form through mass transfer, where the more massive star transfers mass to the less massive one, and the neutron star may be born with a kick ...
  29. [29]
    [PDF] Accretion onto Neutron Stars, and X-ray Binaries
    From the Alfvén radius derived earlier, the capture radius should be of order few×108 cm, compared with only (1 − 1.5) × 106 cm for the radius of the star.
  30. [30]
    XMM-Newton follow-up of two eROSITA X-ray binary candidates
    Jul 9, 2025 · We report on the follow-up observations with XMM-Newton of two X-ray binary candidates identified in the first eROSITA all-sky survey data ...
  31. [31]
    X-ray irradiation of the stellar wind in HMXBs with B supergiants
    Wind-fed high-mass X-ray binaries are powered by accretion of the radiatively driven wind of the luminous component on the compact star. Accretion-generated X- ...<|separator|>
  32. [32]
    Stratified wind from a super-Eddington X-ray binary is slower than ...
    Sep 17, 2025 · The presence of dips in the X-ray lightcurve indicates a high binary inclination, which is optimal for observations of accretion disk winds.Missing: formula capture
  33. [33]
    [PDF] 1.3 Accretion power in astrophysics - MPIFR Bonn
    At this point the matter spirals into the bh. Thus the energy which can be released by accretion onto black holes is given by the energy which can be dissipated ...
  34. [34]
    [PDF] Accretion Flows in X-ray Binaries - arXiv
    I review the X-ray observations of Galactic accreting black holes and neutron stars, ... Potential X–ray emission mechanisms in the various spectral states.
  35. [35]
    [PDF] Thermonuclear X-ray Bursts - Monash
    Thermonuclear X-ray bursts include an overview, X-ray burst ignition, spectral energy distribution, and interaction with the accretion environment.
  36. [36]
    Kilohertz Quasi-Periodic Oscillations in Low-Mass X-Ray Binaries
    Oct 1, 1997 · This paper provides a review of the kilohertz quasi-periodic oscillations in low-mass X-ray binaries recently discovered with NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing ...
  37. [37]
    X-Ray Views of Galactic Accreting Pulsars in High-Mass X ... - MDPI
    Oct 12, 1997 · This review offers a concise overview of the accretion and radiation processes of X-ray pulsars and summarizes their rich observational features.
  38. [38]
    The Galactic LMXB Population and the Galactic Centre Region
    We review the large variety of INTEGRAL based results related to LMXBs. In particular, we discuss the spatial distribution of LMXBs over the Galaxy.
  39. [39]
    A catalogue of low-mass X-ray binaries in the Galaxy
    Low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) are high-energy sources that require multi-wavelength follow-up campaigns to be fully characterised. New transients ...
  40. [40]
    A catalogue of high-mass X-ray binaries in the Galaxy
    We provide a catalogue of 152 HMXBs in the Galaxy with their best known coordinates, the spectral type of the companion star, systemic radial velocities, ...
  41. [41]
    Low-mass X-ray binaries as a stellar mass indicator for the host galaxy
    Considering galaxies as a whole, we find that, in a broad stellar mass range, log(M*) ∼ 9–11.5, the total number of LMXBs and their combined luminosity are ...Missing: persistent | Show results with:persistent
  42. [42]
    Populations of X-Ray Sources in Galaxies - G. Fabbiano
    Luminous HMXBs are expected to dominate the emission of star-forming galaxies (Helfand & Moran 2001). These sources, resulting from the evolution of a massive ...
  43. [43]
    Characterising the short-orbital period X-ray transient Swift J1910.2 ...
    Low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) are systems in which either a stellar-mass ... 1), caused by seeing. &100, TiO absorption bands characteristic of M-stars are ...
  44. [44]
    Black hole and transient binaries - ScienceDirect.com
    The appearance of transient behaviour in a low-mass X-ray binary places very strong constraints on the system. These are most easily satisfied if the accretor ...
  45. [45]
    [PDF] A SHORT REVIEW ON X-RAY BINARIES
    ➢Transient vs persistent. ➢Atoll, Z sources. ➢bursters. ➢ms X-ray pulsars. ➢Radio quiet/loud. Black holes: ➢Transient. ➢Hard X-ray. ➢Q-shape (HID).
  46. [46]
    Spectral state transitions in low-mass X-ray binaries
    In neutron star and black hole X-ray binaries the transitions between the two spectral states, hard and soft, signal the change between accretion.
  47. [47]
    Radiative Processes, Spectral States and Variability of Black-Hole ...
    We review radiative processes responsible for X-ray emission in hard(low) and soft (high) spectral states of black-hole binaries.
  48. [48]
    INTEGRAL overview of High-Mass X–ray Binaries - Oxford Academic
    We considered both persistent and transient sources, hosting either a Be star (Be/XRBs) or a blue supergiant companion (SgHMXBs, including Supergiant Fast X-ray ...
  49. [49]
    Wind Accretion VS Roche Lobe Overflow in HMXBs
    We present a series of time-dependent 2D and 3D numerical simulations illustrating the evolutionary sequence between high mass X-ray binaries fed by wind ...
  50. [50]
    [astro-ph/0111370] How Do Z and Atoll X-ray Binaries Differ? - arXiv
    In this paper, we examine color-color diagrams of nine atoll sources and five Z sources using data from the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer.
  51. [51]
    HOW DO Z AND ATOLL X-RAY BINARIES DIFFER? - IOP Science
    Z sources differ from atoll sources in that they tend to be softer and they trace their full range of spectral variability on timescales of days and with ...
  52. [52]
    [1206.3124] X-ray pulsars: a review - arXiv
    Jun 14, 2012 · Accreting X-ray pulsars are among the most luminous objects in the X-ray sky. In highly magnetized neutron stars (B~10^12 G), the flow of matter is dominated ...Missing: bursters | Show results with:bursters
  53. [53]
    x-ray bursts in neutron star and black hole binaries ... - IOP Science
    In this paper we present observations of neutron star low- mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) and BHCs from the Uncon- ventional Stellar Aspect (USA) experiment as ...
  54. [54]
    Galactic X-ray transients in the first eROSITA all sky survey
    Oct 17, 2025 · We use eROSITA (soft X-ray) spectra of the Galactic transients to show that two distinct types of flaring systems are prevalent: one having peak ...
  55. [55]
  56. [56]
    A physical model for radio and X-ray correlation in black hole ... - arXiv
    Jul 20, 2024 · A tight correlation between the radio and X-ray emission in the hard state of black hole X-ray binaries (BHXRBs) indicates an intrinsic disc-jet ...
  57. [57]
    An in-depth study with IXPE and NuSTAR - Astronomy & Astrophysics
    We report on a comprehensive analysis of simultaneous X-ray polarimetric and spectral data of the bright atoll source GX 9+9 with the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry ...
  58. [58]
    X-ray polarization of Z-type neutron star low-mass X-ray binaries
    In this work, we collected all the polarimetric results obtained so far from observations of Z-sources with IXPE, using a model-independent analysis with ...
  59. [59]
    [PDF] Distances to Galactic X-ray binaries with Gaia DR2
    Feb 5, 2021 · LMXBs can act as independent trac- ers of stellar mass, since low-mass stars comprise the bulk of the stellar mass in a population (Gilfanov ...
  60. [60]
    Low- and intermediate-mass X-ray binaries containing neutron star ...
    We present systematic modelling of low- and intermediate-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs and IMXBs; donor-star mass range 0.92–8.0 M ⊙ and neutron-star accretors)
  61. [61]
    Evolutionary Sequences for Low- and Intermediate-Mass X-Ray ...
    We present the results of a systematic study of the evolution of low- and intermediate-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs and IMXBs).
  62. [62]
    EVOLUTION OF INTERMEDIATE-MASS X-RAY BINARIES DRIVEN ...
    It is generally believed that ultracompact X-ray binaries (UCXBs) evolved from binaries consisting of a neutron star accreting from a low-mass white dwarf (WD) ...
  63. [63]
    The Galactic Population of Low- and Intermediate-Mass X-Ray ...
    We present the first study that combines binary population synthesis in the Galactic disk and detailed evolutionary calculations of low- and intermediate-mass ...
  64. [64]
    Observations of Her X-1 in low states during SRG/eROSITA all-sky ...
    ESO 2021. 1 Introduction. HZ Her/Her X-1 is an intermediate-mass X-ray binary consisting of an accreting neutron star with mass mx = 1.4 M⊙ and spin period ...1 Introduction · 2 X-Ray Data · 2.2 X-Ray Spectral Modeling
  65. [65]
    4U 1210−64: a new member of the rare intermediate-mass X-ray ...
    4U 1210−64 is a peculiar X-ray binary that was first discovered in 1978 by the Uhuru satellite. The analysis of the X-ray data revealed a 6.7-d orbital period.2.1 Spectroscopy · 3 Results · 3.1. 1 Spectral Fitting
  66. [66]
    [1012.2318] The INTEGRAL legacy on High Mass X-ray Binaries
    Dec 10, 2010 · Observations with the INTEGRAL satellite have quadrupled the population of supergiant High Mass X-ray Binaries (HMXBs), revealed a previously ...
  67. [67]
    Long gamma ray bursts from binary black holes
    We consider a scenario for the longest duration gamma ray bursts, resulting from the collapse of a massive rotating star in a close binary system with a ...
  68. [68]
    Be/X-ray binaries | Astrophysics and Space Science
    Jan 7, 2011 · The purpose of this work is to review the observational properties of Be/X-ray binaries. The open questions in Be/X-ray binaries include ...
  69. [69]
    [1101.5036] Be/X-ray binaries - arXiv
    Jan 26, 2011 · Abstract:The purpose of this work is to review the observational properties of Be/X-ray binaries. The open questions in Be/X-ray binaries ...
  70. [70]
    SRG/ART-XC detection of the outburst in historic SMC pulsar XTE ...
    Apr 26, 2025 · The Mikhail Pavlinsky ART-XC telescope onboard the SRG observatory detected a bright X-ray transient at the position of RA, Dec = 17.7852, -73.2787.
  71. [71]
    Persistent GeV Counterpart to the Microquasar GRS 1915+105
    Jan 28, 2025 · Here we present Fermi-LAT observations of the region around the microquasar GRS 1915+105, which reveal the presence of previously unknown multi-GeV emission.
  72. [72]
    Sources of relativistic jets in the Galaxy - Annual Reviews
    Black-hole X-ray binaries with relativistic jets mimic, on a much smaller scale, many of the phenomena seen in quasars and are thus called microquasars. Because ...
  73. [73]
    [PDF] Introduction to Astrophysics of Microquasars - arXiv
    Jun 29, 2005 · The X-ray binaries are stellar systems formed by a normal star and a degenerate object (a neutron star or a black hole of a few solar masses) ...
  74. [74]
    X-ray binaries with relativistic jets -- microquasars
    All of these relativistic jets emit primarily via incoherent synchrotron emission from very high energy electrons spiralling in magnetic fields (although ...
  75. [75]
    universal radio–X-ray correlation in low/hard state black hole binaries
    We present a comprehensive study of (quasi-)simultaneous radio–X-ray observations of stellar black hole binaries during the spectrally hard X-ray state.
  76. [76]
    [PDF] X-ray jets: from microquasars to quasars - MPIFR Bonn
    Synchrotron emission from the same electron dist. If synchrotron + Equipartition: B eq. = 0.3 mG. X-ray emitting electrons: Lorentz factor γ e. > 2 x107 (TeV ...
  77. [77]
    The connection between the fastest astrophysical jets and the spin ...
    Sep 23, 2025 · In this paper, we report on a statistically significant sample of jet speeds from stellar-mass relativistic accretors, and we interpret these ...
  78. [78]
    A superluminal source in the Galaxy - Nature
    Sep 1, 1994 · Rodriguez, L. F., Mirabel, I. F. & Martí, J. ... Coupling between the accreting corona and the relativistic jet in the microquasar GRS 1915+105.
  79. [79]
    Acceleration and transport of relativistic electrons in the jets of the ...
    Jan 25, 2024 · SS 433 is a microquasar, a stellar binary system that launches collimated relativistic jets. We observed SS 433 in gamma rays using the High Energy ...
  80. [80]
    The hypersoft state of Cygnus X–3 - A key to jet quenching in X-ray ...
    Cygnus X–3 is a unique microquasar in the Galaxy hosting a Wolf-Rayet companion orbiting a compact object that most likely is a low-mass black hole. ... Cygnus X– ...
  81. [81]
    MeerKAT discovers a jet-driven bow shock near GRS 1915+ ... - arXiv
    Apr 24, 2025 · Our observations revealed a bow shock structure near GRS 1915+105, likely induced by a jet interacting with the ISM and blowing an overpressured cavity in the ...
  82. [82]
    CXOU J005245.0−722844: discovery of a Be star/white dwarf ...
    We conclude from our observations that the compact object in this system is a white dwarf (WD), making this the seventh candidate Be/WD X-ray binary. The X-ray ...ABSTRACT · INTRODUCTION · OBSERVATIONS · DISCUSSION
  83. [83]
    Einstein Probe Discovery of EP J005245.1−722843 - IOP Science
    Feb 18, 2025 · Be–white dwarf X-ray binary systems (BeWDs) are a subclass of X-ray binaries where a white dwarf (WD) accretes matter from a Be-type main ...
  84. [84]
    A new super-soft X-ray source in the Small Magellanic Cloud
    This makes the system the second candidate for a Be/WD binary after XMMU J052016.0-692505 in the LMC (Kahabka et al. 2006). The X-ray turn-off around MJD 52 ...
  85. [85]
    A LUMINOUS Be+WHITE DWARF SUPERSOFT SOURCE IN THE ...
    We propose that MAXI J0158-744 is a Be–WD binary, and the first example to possibly enter ULX territory. ... The MAXI X-ray spectrum corresponding to the X-ray ...
  86. [86]
    CXOU J005245.0-722844: Discovery of a Be Star / White Dwarf ...
    Aug 2, 2024 · CXOU J005245.0-722844: Discovery of a Be Star / White Dwarf binary system in the SMC via a very fast, super-Eddington X-ray outburst event.
  87. [87]
    Population synthesis of Be/white dwarf binaries in the Galaxy
    In this paper we perform the population computation of the abundance of Be/WD binaries, calculate their expected orbital and physical characteristics and ...
  88. [88]
  89. [89]
    Swift J011511.0-725611: Discovery of a rare Be Star / White Dwarf ...
    Sep 11, 2021 · Abstract page for arXiv paper 2109.05307: Swift J011511.0-725611: Discovery of a rare Be Star / White Dwarf binary system in the SMC.