On the distance to the black hole X-ray binary Swift J1727.8$-$1613

Benjamin J. Burridge, James C. A. Miller-Jones, Arash Bahramian, Steve R. Prabu, Reagan Streeter, Noel Castro Segura, Jesús M. Corral Santana, Christian Knigge, Andrzej Zdziarski, Daniel Mata Sánchez, Evangelia Tremou, Francesco Carotenuto, Rob Fender, Payaswini Saikia

Published: 2025/2/10

Abstract

We review the existing distance estimates to the black hole X-ray binary Swift J1727.8$-$1613, present new radio and near-UV spectra to update the distance constraints, and discuss the accuracies and caveats of the associated methodologies. We use line-of-sight HI absorption spectra captured using the MeerKAT radio telescope to estimate a maximum radial velocity with respect to the local standard of rest of $24.8 \pm 2.8 \, {\rm km\,s^{-1}}$ for Swift J1727.8$-$1613, which is significantly lower than that of a nearby extragalactic reference source. From this we derive a near kinematic distance of $d_{\rm near} = 3.6 \pm 0.3 \, ({stat}) \pm 2.3 \, ({sys}) \, {\rm kpc}$ as a lower bound after accounting for additional uncertainties given its Galactic longitude and latitude, $(l, b) \approx (8.6^{\circ}, 10.3^{\circ})$. Near-UV spectra from the Hubble Space Telescope's Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph allows us to constrain the line-of-sight colour excess to $E(B\!-\!V) = 0.37 \pm 0.01 \, ({stat}) \pm 0.025 \, ({sys})$. We then implement this in Monte Carlo simulations and present a distance to Swift J1727.8$-$1613 of $5.5^{+1.4}_{-1.1} \, {\rm kpc}$, under the assumption that the donor star is an unevolved, main sequence K3-5V star. This distance implies a natal kick velocity of $190 \pm 30 \, {\rm km\,s^{-1}}$ and therefore an asymmetrical supernova explosion within the Galactic disk as the expected birth mechanism. A lower distance is implied if the donor star has instead lost significant mass during the binary evolution. Hence, more accurate measurements of the binary inclination angle or donor star rotational broadening from future observations would help to better constrain the distance.