TY - JOUR
T1 - Stratified wind from a super-Eddington X-ray binary is slower than expected
AU - XRISM Collaboration
AU - Mehdipour, Missagh
AU - Tomaru, Ryota
AU - Neilsen, Joey
AU - Zhuravleva, Irina
AU - Yukita, Mihoko
AU - Yoshida, Tessei
AU - Yoneyama, Tomokage
AU - Yaqoob, Tahir
AU - Yamauchi, Shigeo
AU - Yamauchi, Makoto
AU - Yamasaki, Noriko
AU - Yamaoka, Kazutaka
AU - Yamaguchi, Hiroya
AU - Yamada, Shinya
AU - Yamada, Satoshi
AU - Williams, Brian J.
AU - Watanabe, Shin
AU - Vink, Jacco
AU - Uno, Shinichiro
AU - Ueda, Yoshihiro
AU - Uchiyama, Hideki
AU - Uchida, Yuusuke
AU - Uchida, Nagomi
AU - Uchida, Hiroyuki
AU - Tümer, Aysegül
AU - Tsuru, Takeshi G.
AU - Tsunemi, Hiroshi
AU - Tsujimoto, Masahiro
AU - Tsuboi, Yohko
AU - Terashima, Yuichi
AU - Terada, Yukikatsu
AU - Tashiro, Makoto
AU - Tanimoto, Atsushi
AU - Tanaka, Takaaki
AU - Tamura, Keisuke
AU - Tamagawa, Toru
AU - Takeo, Mai
AU - Takahashi, Hiromitsu
AU - Szymkowiak, Andrew
AU - Suzuki, Hiromasa
AU - Smith, Randall
AU - Simionescu, Aurora
AU - Shidatsu, Megumi
AU - Seta, Hiromi
AU - Sawada, Makoto
AU - Sato, Toshiki
AU - Sato, Kosuke
AU - Pottschmidt, Katja
AU - Porter, Frederick Scott
AU - Furuzawa, Akihiro
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/10/2
Y1 - 2025/10/2
N2 - Accretion disks in strong gravity ubiquitously produce winds, seen as blueshifted absorption lines in the X-ray band of both stellar mass X-ray binaries (black holes and neutron stars)1, 2, 3–4 and supermassive black holes5. Some of the most powerful winds (termed Eddington winds) are expected to arise from systems in which radiation pressure is sufficient to unbind material from the inner disk (L ≳ LEdd). These winds should be extremely fast and carry a large amount of kinetic power, which, when associated with supermassive black holes, would make them a prime contender for the feedback mechanism linking the growth of those black holes with their host galaxies6. Here we show the XRISM Resolve spectrum of the galactic neutron star X-ray binary, GX 13+1, which reveals one of the densest winds ever seen in absorption lines. This Compton-thick wind significantly attenuates the flux, making it appear faint, although it is intrinsically more luminous than usual (L ≳ LEdd). However, the wind is extremely slow, more consistent with the predictions of thermal-radiative winds launched by X-ray irradiation of the outer disk than with the expected Eddington wind driven by radiation pressure from the inner disk. This puts new constraints on the origin of winds from bright accretion flows in binaries, but also highlights the very different origin required for the ultrafast (v ~ 0.3c) winds seen in recent Resolve observations of a supermassive black hole at a similarly high Eddington ratio7.
AB - Accretion disks in strong gravity ubiquitously produce winds, seen as blueshifted absorption lines in the X-ray band of both stellar mass X-ray binaries (black holes and neutron stars)1, 2, 3–4 and supermassive black holes5. Some of the most powerful winds (termed Eddington winds) are expected to arise from systems in which radiation pressure is sufficient to unbind material from the inner disk (L ≳ LEdd). These winds should be extremely fast and carry a large amount of kinetic power, which, when associated with supermassive black holes, would make them a prime contender for the feedback mechanism linking the growth of those black holes with their host galaxies6. Here we show the XRISM Resolve spectrum of the galactic neutron star X-ray binary, GX 13+1, which reveals one of the densest winds ever seen in absorption lines. This Compton-thick wind significantly attenuates the flux, making it appear faint, although it is intrinsically more luminous than usual (L ≳ LEdd). However, the wind is extremely slow, more consistent with the predictions of thermal-radiative winds launched by X-ray irradiation of the outer disk than with the expected Eddington wind driven by radiation pressure from the inner disk. This puts new constraints on the origin of winds from bright accretion flows in binaries, but also highlights the very different origin required for the ultrafast (v ~ 0.3c) winds seen in recent Resolve observations of a supermassive black hole at a similarly high Eddington ratio7.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105017657575
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105017657575#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1038/s41586-025-09495-w
DO - 10.1038/s41586-025-09495-w
M3 - Article
C2 - 40963023
AN - SCOPUS:105017657575
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 646
SP - 57
EP - 61
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 8083
ER -