XMM-Newton detection of a transient X-ray source in the vicinity of V838 Monocerotis
Fabio Antonini, Rodolfo Jr. Montez, Joel H. Kastner, Howard E. Bond,, Noam Soker, Romuald Tylenda, Sumner Starrfield, Ehud Behar

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of a variable X-ray source near V838 Monocerotis in 2008, analyzes its spectral properties, and discusses implications for stellar merger models and ejecta-companion interactions.
Contribution
First detection of a luminous, variable X-ray source near V838 Mon, with spectral analysis and discussion of its origin and implications for stellar merger scenarios.
Findings
X-ray source detected in 2008 with two plasma components
No similar source detected in 2009 and 2010 observations
Spatial analysis suggests possible variability or multiple sources
Abstract
We report the XMM-Newton/EPIC detection in 2008 March of a luminous (L_X ~ 10^32-33 erg/s), variable X-ray source in the vicinity (within ~6") of the enigmatic star V838 Mon, which underwent a spectacular outburst in early 2002. Spectral modeling of the XMM-Newton X-ray source indicates the presence of two plasma components with characteristic temperatures of TX ~ 2x10^6K and ~1.5x10^7K, attenuated by an absorbing column (N_H ~ 4 x 10^21cm^-2) that is consistent with the visual extinction measured toward V838 Mon (A_V ~ 2). No such luminous source was detected in the immediate vicinity of V838 Mon in Chandra/ACIS-S observations obtained about one year after outburst or, most recently, in 2010 January. The two XMM source spectral components appear to be marginally spatially resolved, with the spatial centroid of the hard component lying closer to (within ~2" of) the position of V838 Mon…
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