Discovery of a Large Population of Ultraluminous X-ray Sources in the Bulge-less Galaxies NGC 337 and ESO 501-23
Garrett Somers, Smita Mathur, Paul Martini, Linda Watson, Catherine J., Grier, and Laura Ferrarese

TL;DR
This study used Chandra observations to discover 16 new ultraluminous X-ray source candidates in bulge-less galaxies, revealing insights into their high mass X-ray binary populations and star formation rates, with implications for understanding galaxy evolution.
Contribution
The paper reports the discovery of a large population of ULX candidates in bulge-less galaxies and characterizes their properties, including a detailed analysis of the HMXB population and star formation rates.
Findings
16 new ULX candidates identified in bulge-less galaxies
HMXB luminosity function consistent with star formation rates
Discovery of a bright ULX candidate with Lx > 10^40 erg/s
Abstract
We have used Chandra observations of eight bulge-less disk galaxies to identify new ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) candidates, study their high mass X-ray binary (HMXB) population, and search for low-luminosity active galactic nuclei (AGN). We report the discovery of 16 new ULX candidates in our sample of galaxies. Eight of these are found in the star forming galaxy NGC 337, none of which are expected to be background contaminants. The HMXB luminosity function of NGC 337 implies a star formation rate (SFR) of 6.8 \msun\ yr, consistent at 1.5 with a recent state of the art SFR determination. We also report the discovery of a bright ULX candidate (X-1) in ESO 501-23. X-1's spectrum is well fit by an absorbed power law with and N = 1.13 cm, implying a 0.3-8 keV flux of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
