A Variable Black Hole X-Ray Source in a NGC 1399 Globular Cluster
I Chun Shih, Arunav Kundu, Thomas J. Maccarone, Stephen E. Zepf, Tana, D. Joseph

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a variable black hole in a globular cluster of NGC 1399, confirmed through rapid X-ray variability and long-term luminosity changes, indicating such black holes may be more common in globular clusters than previously thought.
Contribution
It provides the second confirmed extragalactic globular cluster black hole via rapid X-ray variability, highlighting the prevalence of accreting black holes in GCs.
Findings
Detected rapid X-ray variability indicating a black hole
Observed long-term luminosity decline over years
Showed spectral hardening as the source faded
Abstract
We have discovered an accreting black hole (BH) in a spectroscopically confirmed globular cluster (GC) in NGC 1399 through monitoring of its X-ray activity. The source, with a peak luminosity of L_x=2x10^39 ergs/s, reveals an order of magnitude change in the count rate within ~10 ks in a Chandra observation. The BH resides in a metal-rich [Fe/H]~0.2 globular cluster. After RZ2109 in NGC 4472 this is only the second black-hole X-ray source in a GC confirmed via rapid X-ray variability. Unlike RZ2109, the X-ray spectrum of this BH source did not change during the period of rapid variability. In addition to the short-term variability the source also exhibits long-term variability. After being bright for at least a decade since 1993 within a span of 2 years it became progressively fainter, and eventually undetectable, or marginally detectable, in deep Chandra and XMM observations. The…
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