NGC300 X-1 and IC10 X-1: a new breed of black hole binary?
R. Barnard, J. S. Clark, U. C. Kolb

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray data of NGC300 X-1 and IC10 X-1, revealing they are persistent high-state black hole binaries with non-thermal spectra, suggesting a new class of stable, high accretion rate black hole systems.
Contribution
It identifies NGC300 X-1 and IC10 X-1 as a new breed of persistent high-state black hole binaries with unique spectral properties.
Findings
Both sources exhibit high-state disc-accreting X-ray binary characteristics.
Their spectra are predominantly non-thermal, unlike typical Galactic BH binaries.
They may represent a new class of persistent BH XBs with stable discs and corona.
Abstract
[ABRIDGED] IC10 X-1 has recently been confirmed as a black hole (BH) + Wolf-Rayet (WR) X-ray binary, and NGC300 X-1 is thought to be. IC10 X-1 and NGC300 X-1 have similar X-ray properties, with luminosities ~10^38 erg/s, and orbital periods ~30 hr. We investigate similarities between these two, as well as differences between them and the known Galactic BH binary systems. We have examined XMM-Newton observations of NGC300 X-1 and IC10 X-1. We extracted lightcurves and spectra; power density spectra (PDS) were constructed from the lightcurves, and the X-ray emission spectra were modeled. Each source exhibits PDS that are characteristic of disc-accreting X-ray binaries (XBs) in the high state. In this state, Galactic XBs with known BH primaries have soft, thermal emission; however the emission spectra of our targets are predominantly non-thermal. Furthermore, the Observation 1 spectrum of…
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