NuSTAR and Chandra Insight into the Nature of the 3-40 keV Nuclear Emission in NGC 253
B. D. Lehmer, D. R. Wik, A. E. Hornschemeier, A. Ptak, V. Antoniou, M., K. Argo, K. Bechtol, S. Boggs, F. E. Christensen, W. W. Craig, C. J. Hailey,, F. A. Harrison, R. Krivonos, J.-C. Leyder, T.J. Maccarone, D. Stern, T., Venters, A. Zezas, and W. W. Zhang

TL;DR
This study uses simultaneous NuSTAR and Chandra observations to analyze the nuclear X-ray emission in NGC 253, identifying a variable source with ULX-like spectra and discussing its possible nature as an AGN or ULX.
Contribution
First simultaneous NuSTAR and Chandra monitoring of NGC 253's nucleus, revealing a variable hard X-ray source with ULX-like spectra and constraining its nature.
Findings
The nuclear region's 3-40 keV intensity varied by a factor of ~2.
A bright X-ray source near the galaxy's center shows ULX-like spectral features.
Historical data suggest the 2003 source was a better AGN candidate than the 2012 source.
Abstract
We present results from three nearly simultaneous NuSTAR and Chandra monitoring observations between 2012 Sep 2 and 2012 Nov 16 of local star-forming galaxy NGC 253. The 3-40 keV NuSTAR intensity of the inner 20 arcsec (~400 pc) nuclear region varied by a factor of ~2 across the three monitoring observations. The Chandra data reveal that the nuclear region contains three bright X-ray sources, including a luminous (L2-10 keV ~ few x 10^39 erg/s) point source ~1 arcsec from the dynamical center of the galaxy (within the 3sigma positional uncertainty of the dynamical center); this source drives the overall variability of the nuclear region at energies >3 keV. We make use of the variability to measure the spectra of this single hard X-ray source when it was in bright states. The spectra are well described by an absorbed (NH ~ 1.6 x 10^23 cm^-2) broken power-law model with spectral slopes…
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