Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-1997

Abstract

We show that stable disk accretion should be very rare among low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) and cataclysmic variables whose evolution is driven by the nuclear expansion of the secondary star on the first giant branch. Stable accretion is confined to neutron star systems in which the secondary is still relatively massive and to some supersoft white dwarf accretors. All other systems, including all black hole systems, appear as soft X-ray transients or dwarf novae. All long-period neutron star systems become transient well before most of the envelope mass is transferred and remain transient until envelope exhaustion. This complicates attempts to compare the numbers of millisecond pulsars in the Galactic disk with their LMXB progenitors and means that the pulsar spin rates are fixed in systems that are transient rather than steady, contrary to common assumption. The long-period persistent sources Sco X-2, LMC X-2, Cyg X-2, and V395 Car must have minimum companion masses, M2, of about 0.75 M⊙ if they contain neutron stars and still larger M2 if they contain black holes. The neutron star transient GRO J1744-2844 must have M2 ≲ 0.87 M⊙. The existence of any steady source at long periods supports the ideas that (1) the accretion disks in many, if not all, LMXBs are strongly irradiated by the central source and (2) mass transfer is thermally unstable in long-period supersoft X-ray sources. © 1997. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Astrophysical Journal

First Page

844

Last Page

847

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