Probing the Peculiar Behavior of GRS 1915+105 at Near-Eddington Luminosity
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To understand the nature of supercritical accretion, we systematically analyze the {\it RXTE}/PCA data of GRS 1915+105 in its quasi-steady states, by choosing data with small variability during 1999 -- 2000. We apply a multicolor disk plus a thermal Comptonization model and take into consideration accurate interstellar absorption, a reflection component, and absorption features from the disk wind self-consistently. There is a strong correlation between the inner disk temperature and the fraction of the disk component. Most of the Comptonization-dominated spectra show $T_{\rm in} \sim 1$ keV with a high electron temperature of $>10$ keV, which may correspond to the very high state in canonical black hole X-ray binaries (BHBs). By contrast, the disk-dominated spectra have $T_{\rm in} \sim 2$ keV with a low temperature ($<10$ keV) and optically thick Comptonization, and show two separate branches in the ($L$ -- $T_{\rm in}$) diagram. The lower branch clearly follows the $L \propto T_{\rm in}^4$-track. Furthermore, applying the extended disk blackbody model, we find that 9 out of 12 datasets with disk luminosity above $0.3 L_{\rm E}$ prefer a flatter temperature gradient than that in the standard disk ($p < 0.7$). We interpret that, in the lower branch, the disk extends down to the innermost stable circular orbit, and is most probably in the slim disk state. A rapidly spinning black hole can explain both the lack of the $L \propto T_{\rm in}^2$-track and a high value of spectral hardening factor ($\sim 4$) that would be required for a non-rotating black hole. The spectra in the upper branch are consistent with the picture of a truncated disk with low temperature Comptonization. This state is uniquely observed from GRS 1915+105 among BHBs, which may be present at near-Eddington luminosity.
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