Abstract

We have analyzed in a systematic way about nine years of INTEGRAL data (17-100 keV) focusing on Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients (SFXTs) and three classical High Mass X-ray Binaries (HMXBs). Our approach has been twofold: image based analysis, sampled over a ~ks time frame to investigate the long-term properties of the sources, and lightcurve based analysis, sampled over a 100s time frame to seize the fast variability of each source during its ~ks activity. We find that while the prototypical SFXTs (IGR J17544-2619, XTE J1739-302 and SAX J1818.6-1703) are among the sources with the lowest ~ks based duty cycle ($<$1% activity over nine years of data), when studied at the 100s level, they are the ones with the highest detection percentage, meaning that, when active, they tend to have many bright short-term flares with respect to the other SFXTs. To investigate in a coherent and self consistent way all the available results within a physical scenario, we have extracted cumulative luminosity distributions for all the sources of the sample. The characterization of such distributions in hard X-rays, presented for the first time in this work for the SFXTs, shows that a power-law model is a plausible representation for SFXTs, while it can only reproduce the very high luminosity tail of the classical HMXBs, and even then, with a significantly steeper power-law slope with respect to SFXTs. The physical implications of these results within the frame of accretion in wind-fed systems are discussed.

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