Attempt to explain black hole spin in X-ray binaries by new physics

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Abstract

It is widely believed that the spin of black holes in X-ray binaries is mainly natal. A significant spin-up from accretion is not possible. If the secondary has a low mass, the black hole spin cannot change too much even if the black hole swallows the whole stellar companion. If the secondary has a high mass, its lifetime is too short to transfer the necessary amount of matter and spin the black hole up. However, while black holes formed from the collapse of a massive star with solar metallicity are expected to have low birth spin, current spin measurements show that some black holes in X-ray binaries are rotating very rapidly. Here we show that, if these objects are not the Kerr black holes of general relativity, the accretion of a small amount of matter (∼2 M⊙) can make them look like very fast-rotating Kerr black holes. Such a possibility is not in contradiction with any observation and it can explain current spin measurements in a very simple way.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Bambi, C. (2015). Attempt to explain black hole spin in X-ray binaries by new physics. European Physical Journal C, 75(1), 1–6. https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-014-3248-x

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