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Demonstrating the likely neutron star nature of five M31 globular cluster sources with Swift-NuSTAR spectroscopy

journal contribution
posted on 2016-04-19, 09:47 authored by T. J. Maccarone, M. Yukita, A. Hornschemeier, B. D. Lehmer, V. Antoniou, A. Ptak, D. R. Wik, A. Zezas, P. Boyd, J. Kennea, Kim Page, M. Eracleous, B. F. Williams, S. E. Boggs, F. E. Christensen, W. W. Craig, C. J. Hailey, F. Harrison, D. Stern, W. W. Zhang
We present the results of a joint Swift-NuSTAR spectroscopy campaign on M31. We focus on the five brightest globular cluster X-ray sources in our fields. Two of these had previously been argued to be black hole candidates on the basis of apparent hard-state spectra at luminosities above those for which neutron stars are in hard states. We show that these two sources are likely to be Z-sources (i.e. low magnetic field neutron stars accreting near their Eddington limits), or perhaps bright atoll sources (low magnetic field neutron stars which are just a bit fainter than this level) on the basis of simultaneous Swift and NuSTAR spectra which cover a broader range of energies. These new observations reveal spectral curvature above 6-8 keV that would be hard to detect without the broader energy coverage the NuSTAR data provide relative to Chandra and XMM-Newton. We show that the other three sources are also likely to be bright neutron star X-ray binaries, rather than black hole X-ray binaries. We discuss why it should already have been realized that it was unlikely that these objects were black holes on the basis of their being persistent sources, and we re-examine past work which suggested that tidal capture products would be persistently bright X-ray emitters. We discuss how this problem is likely due to neglecting disk winds in older work that predict which systems will be persistent and which will be transient.

History

Citation

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2016, 458 (4): 3633-3643.

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

0035-8711

eissn

1365-2966

Acceptance date

2016-03-01

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2016-04-19

Publisher version

http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/458/4/3633

Notes

12 pages, 3 figures

Language

en

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