CXOM31 J004253.1+411422: The first ultra-luminous X-ray transient in M 31
A. Kaur, M. Henze, F. Haberl, W. Pietsch, J. Greiner, A. Rau, D.H., Hartmann, G. Sala, M. Hernanz

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of the first ultra-luminous X-ray transient in M31, revealing its spectral properties, decay behavior, and suggesting it is a black hole accreting near the Eddington limit.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of an ULX transient in M31, including spectral modeling and decay analysis, indicating a black hole origin.
Findings
The source's luminosity decreased from 3.8x10^{39} to 0.5x10^{39} erg/s over three months.
Spectral analysis shows a thermal component at ~1 keV and a non-thermal tail.
The decay follows an exponential with a 32-day time constant.
Abstract
We seek clarification of the nature of X-ray sources detected in M 31. Here we focus on CXOM31 J004253.1+411422, the brightness of which suggests that it belongs to the class of ultraluminous X-ray sources. We determine the X-ray properties of sources detected in the XMM-Newton Chandra monitoring program. We investigate spectral properties and search for periodic or quasi-periodic oscillations. A multi-component model is applied to the spectra obtained from XMM-Newton data to evaluate the relative contributions from thermal and non-thermal emission. The time dependence of this ratio is evaluated over a period of forty days. We simultaneously fit data from XMM-Newton EPIC-pn, MOS1 and MOS2 detectors with (non-thermal) powerlaw and (thermal) multicolored blackbody. The X-ray spectrum is best fit by the combination of a thermal component with kT ~ 1 keV and a powerlaw component with photon…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
