Reinstating the M31 X-ray system RX J0042.3+4115 as a black hole X-ray binary, and compelling evidence for an extended corona
R. Barnard, M. R. Garcia, and S. S. Murray

TL;DR
This study reclassifies the M31 X-ray source RX J0042.3+4115 as a black hole binary, providing evidence for an extended corona and analyzing its spectral states over 12 years.
Contribution
It offers new multi-epoch observational evidence confirming RX J0042.3+4115 as a black hole binary with an extended corona, and compares its properties to GRS 1915+105.
Findings
RX J0042.3+4115 is a persistent black hole binary.
Spectral states match known black hole states.
Evidence supports an extended corona during steep power law state.
Abstract
The M31 X-ray source RX J0042.3+4115 was originally identified as a black hole binary because it displayed characteristic low state variability at conspicuously high luminosities; unfortunately, this variability was later found to be artificial. However, analysis of 84 Chandra ACIS observations, an HST ACS/WFC observation, and a 60 ks XMM-Newton observation has supplied new evidence that RX J0042.3+4115 is indeed a black hole binary. The brightest optical star within 3 sigma of the position of RX J0042.3+4115 had a F435W (~B) magnitude of 25.4+/-0.2; M_B > -0.4, hence we find a low mass donor likely. RX J0042.3+4115 was persistently bright over ~12 years. Spectral fits revealed characteristic black hole binary states: a low/hard state at 2.08+/-0.08 E+38 erg/s, and a steep power law state at 2.41+/-0.05 E+38 erg/s (0.3--10 keV). The high luminosity low state suggests a ~20 M_Sun…
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