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25 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0211178

 Article overview



X-ray Spectroscopic Evidence for Intermediate Mass Black Holes: Cool Accretion Disks in Two Ultra--Luminous X-ray Sources
J. M. Miller ; G. Fabbiano ; M. C. Miller ; A. C. Fabian ;
Date 8 Nov 2002
Journal Astrophys.J. 585 (2003) L37-L40
Subject astro-ph
Affiliation Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, University of Maryland, University of Cambridge Inst. of Astronomy
AbstractWe have analyzed an XMM-Newton observation of the nearby spiral galaxy NGC 1313, which contains two "ultra-luminous" X-ray (ULX) sources. We measure isotropic luminosities of L_X = 2.0 * 10^(40) erg/s and L_X = 6.6 * 10^(39) erg/s for NGC 1313 X-1 and X-2 (0.2-10.0 keV, assuming a distance of 3.7 Mpc). The spectra statistically require soft and hard spectral components to describe the continuum emission; some prior studies of ULXs have claimed cool soft components with lower statistics. The improvement over several single-component models exceeds the 8 sigma level of confidence for X-1; the improvement for X-2 is significant at the 3 sigma level. The soft components in these ULX spectra are well-fit by multi-color disk blackbody models with color temperatures of kT = 150 eV. This temperature differs markedly from those commonly measured in the spectra of stellar-mass (10 M_sun) black holes in their brightest states (kT ~ 1 keV). It is expected that the temperature of an accretion disk orbiting a black hole should decrease with increasing black hole mass. If the soft components we measure are due to emission from the inner region of an accretion disk, and disks extend close to the innermost stable circular orbit at the accretion rates being probed, the low color temperatures may be interpreted as spectroscopic evidence of black holes with intermediate masses: M_BH ~ 10^(3) M_sun. Simple Eddington scaling arguments suggest a mimum mass of M_BH ~ 10^(2) M_sun. NGC 1313 X-1 and X-2 are found in optical nebulae (Pakull and Mirioni 2002), which may indicate that anisotropic emission geometries are unlikely to account for the fluxes observed.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0211178
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