The nature of the X-ray binary transient MAXI J1834–021: Clues from its first observed outburst

Manca, A.; Marino, A.; Borghese, A.; Coti Zelati, F.; Mastroserio, G.; Sanna, A.; Homan, J.; Connors, R. M. T.; Del Santo, M.; Armas Padilla, M.; Muñoz-Darias, T.; Di Salvo, T.; Rea, N.; García, J. A.; Riggio, A.; Baglio, M. C.; Burderi, L.
Bibliographical reference

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Advertised on:
7
2025
Number of authors
17
IAC number of authors
3
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
MAXI J1834–021 is a new X-ray transient discovered in February 2023. We analysed the spectral and timing properties of MAXI J1834–021 using NICER, NuSTAR and Swift data collected between March and October 2023. The light curve showed a main peak followed by a second activity phase. Most of the spectra extracted from individual NICER observations could be adequately fit with a Comptonisation component alone, while some required an additional thermal component. The spectral evolution is consistent with a softening trend as the source becomes brighter in X-rays. We also analysed the broadband spectrum by combining data from simultaneous NICER and NuSTAR observations on March 10, 2023. This spectrum can be fitted with a disc component having an inner radius temperature of kTin∼0.4 keV and a Comptonisation component with a power-law photon index of Γ∼1.8. By including a reflection component in the modelling, we obtained a 3σ upper limit for the inner disc radius of 11.4 gravitational radii. We also detected a quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO), whose central frequency varies with time (from 2 Hz to ∼0.9 Hz), and anti-correlates with the hardness ratio. Based on the observed spectral-timing properties, MAXI J1834–021 can be classified as a low-mass X-ray binary in outburst. However, we cannot draw a definitive conclusion about the nature of the accreting compact object, which could currently be a black hole or a neutron star.