Object-X: The Brightest Mid-IR Point Source in M33
Rubab Khan, K. Z. Stanek, C. S. Kochanek, A. Z. Bonanos

TL;DR
Object X in M33 is the brightest mid-infrared point source, likely a massive evolved star obscured by dust, providing insights into a brief, critical stellar evolutionary phase.
Contribution
This paper identifies Object X as a rare, massive evolved star in M33, highlighting its unique mid-IR brightness and obscuration, and proposes its evolutionary status.
Findings
Object X is the brightest mid-IR point source in M33.
Object X is a heavily obscured, massive evolved star.
It exhibits optical and mid-IR variability indicating stellar activity.
Abstract
We discuss the nature of the brightest mid-IR point source (which we dub Object X) in the nearby galaxy M33. Although multi-wavelength data on this object have existed in the literature for some time, it has not previously been recognized as the most luminous mid-IR object in M33 because it is entirely unremarkable in both optical and near-IR light. In the Local Group Galaxies Survey, Object X is a faint red source visible in VRI and H-alpha but not U or B. It was easily seen at JHK_s in the 2MASS survey. It is the brightest point source in all four Spitzer IRAC bands and is also visible in the MIPS 24-micron band. Its bolometric luminosity is 5x10^5 L_sun. The source is optically variable on short time scales (tens of days) and is also slightly variable in the mid-IR, indicating that it is a star. Archival photographic plates (from 1949 and 1991) show no optical source, so the star has…
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