The nature of the bright ULX X-2 in NGC3921: a Chandra position and HST candidate counterpart
P. G. Jonker, M. Heida, M. A. P. Torres, J. C. A. Miller-Jones, A. C., Fabian, E. M. Ratti, G. Miniutti, D. J. Walton, T. P. Roberts

TL;DR
This study uses Chandra and HST data to analyze a bright ULX in NGC3921, revealing its variable nature, potential optical counterparts, and discussing possible origins including tidal disruption events.
Contribution
It provides the first precise Chandra position of the ULX, identifies candidate optical counterparts, and explores a novel tidal disruption flare hypothesis.
Findings
ULX luminosity varies between observations.
Candidate optical counterparts show variability and are resolved into two sources.
Tidal disruption flare scenario is unlikely to account for multiple bright ULXs.
Abstract
We report on Chandra observations of the bright ultra-luminous X-ray (ULX) source in NGC3921. Previous XMM observations reported in the literature show the presence of a bright ULX at a 0.5-10 keV luminosity of 2x10^40 erg/s. Our Chandra observation finds the source at a lower luminosity of ~8x10^39 erg/s, furthermore, we provide a Chandra position of the ULX accurate to 0.7" at 90% confidence. The X-ray variability makes it unlikely that the high luminosity is caused by several separate X-ray sources. In 3 epochs of archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations we find a candidate counterpart to the ULX. There is direct evidence for variability between the two epochs of WFPC2 F814W observations with the observation obtained in 2000 showing a brighter source. Furthermore, converting the 1994 F336W and 2000 F300W WFPC2 and the 2010 F336W WFC3 observations to the Johnson U-band…
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