A bright ultraluminous X-ray source in NGC 5907
Andrew D. Sutton (1), Timothy P. Roberts (1), Jeanette C. Gladstone, (2), Sean A. Farrell (3, 4), Emma Reilly (3, 5), Michael R. Goad (3), Neil, Gehrels (6) ((1) University of Durham, (2) University of Alberta, (3), University of Leicester, (4) University of Sydney

TL;DR
This study analyzes a highly luminous, absorbed ULX in NGC 5907, revealing spectral and variability features consistent with a super-Eddington stellar-mass black hole rather than an intermediate-mass black hole.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectral and variability analysis of a ULX, suggesting a super-Eddington stellar-mass black hole as the source, challenging the intermediate-mass black hole hypothesis.
Findings
Spectrally hard with a break indicating ultraluminous accretion state
Dominated by a cool, optically-thick Comptonising corona
No evidence for an intermediate-mass black hole
Abstract
We present a multi-mission X-ray analysis of a bright (peak observed 0.3-10 keV luminosity of ~ 6x10^{40} erg s^{-1}), but relatively highly absorbed ULX in the edge-on spiral galaxy NGC 5907. The ULX is spectrally hard in X-rays (Gamma ~ 1.2-1.7, when fitted with an absorbed power-law), and has a previously-reported hard spectral break consistent with it being in the ultraluminous accretion state. It is also relatively highly absorbed for a ULX, with a column of ~ 0.4-0.9x10^{22} atom cm^{-2} in addition to the line-of-sight column in our Galaxy. Although its X-ray spectra are well represented by accretion disc models, its variability characteristics argue against this interpretation. The ULX spectra instead appear dominated by a cool, optically-thick Comptonising corona. We discuss how the measured 9 per cent rms variability and a hardening of the spectrum as its flux diminishes might…
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