The second ULX transient in M31: Chandra, HST and XMM observations, and evidence for an extended corona
R. Barnard, M. Garcia, and S. S. Murray

TL;DR
This study reports on the second ultraluminous X-ray source in M31, combining multi-wavelength observations to analyze its properties, and provides evidence supporting an extended corona model over a compact one.
Contribution
It presents new observational data and analysis favoring an extended corona scenario for the ULX in M31, with implications for understanding its accretion structure.
Findings
Optical counterpart identified with low-mass donor.
Lightcurve analysis favors extended corona with exponential decay.
Estimated orbital period of 9-30 hours, consistent with previous ULX.
Abstract
XMM J004243.6+412519 is a transient X-ray source in M31, first discovered 2012 January 15. Different approaches to fitting the brightest follow-up observation gave luminosities 1.3--2.5E+39 erg/s, making it the second ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) in M31, with a probable black hole accretor. These different models represent different scenarios for the corona: optically thick and compact, or optically thin and extended. We obtained Chandra ACIS and {\em HST} ACS observations of this object as part of our transient monitoring program, and also observed it serendipitously in a 120 ks XMM-Newton observation. We identify an optical counterpart at J2000 position 00:42:43.70 +41:25:18.54; its F435W (~ B band) magnitude was 25.97+/-0.03 in the 2012 March 7 observation, and >28.4 at the 4 sigma level during the 2012 September 7 observation, indicating a low mass donor. We created two…
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