Long-Term Spectral Variations of Ultraluminous X-ray Sources in the Interacting Galaxy Systems M51 and NGC4490/85
Tessei Yoshida, Ken Ebisawa, Kyoko Matsushita, Masahiro Tsujimoto, and, Toshihiro Kawaguchi

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray spectral data from seven ULXs in interacting galaxies, revealing two main states with distinct spectral characteristics and suggesting ULXs exhibit unique states not seen in Galactic black hole binaries.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral analysis of ULXs across multiple observations, identifying two main spectral states and proposing their relation to known BHB states, including a potentially unique ULX state.
Findings
ULXs show bimodal luminosity distribution with two main states.
Most bright state spectra fit the multi-color disk or slim disk models.
Faint state spectra are characterized by power-law models with wide photon index range.
Abstract
Variable ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs), which are considered to be black hole binaries (BHBs), are known to show state transitions similarly to Galactic BHBs. However, the relation between the ULX states and the Galactic BHB states is still unclear primarily due to less well-understood behaviors of ULXs in contrast to the Galactic BHBs. Here, we report a statistical X-ray spectral study of 34 energy spectra from seven bright ULXs in the interacting galaxy systems M51 and NGC4490/85, using archive data from multiple Chandra and XMM-Newton observations spanning for a few years. In order to compare with Galactic BHB states, we applied representative spectral models of BHBs; a power-law (PL), a multi-color disk black body (MCD), and a slim disk model to all the ULX spectra. We found a hint of a bimodal structure in the luminosity distribution of the samples, suggesting that ULXs have…
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