An Ultraluminous X-ray Source Powered by An Accreting Neutron Star
M. Bachetti (1,2), F. A. Harrison (3), D. J. Walton (3), B. W., Grefenstette (3), D. Chakrabarty (4), F. F\"urst (3), D. Barret (1,2), A., Beloborodov (5), S. E. Boggs (6), F. E. Christensen (7), W. W. Craig (8), A., C. Fabian (9), C. J. Hailey (10), A. Hornschemeier (11)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a neutron star powering an ultraluminous X-ray source in galaxy M82, demonstrating neutron stars can reach luminosities previously thought exclusive to black holes, challenging existing accretion models.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence that neutron stars can produce ultraluminous X-ray emissions exceeding the Eddington limit, expanding understanding of ULX sources.
Findings
Detected pulsations indicating a neutron star in a ULX
Observed luminosity surpassing the Eddington limit for neutron stars
Challenges existing models of accretion onto magnetized compact objects
Abstract
Ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULX) are off-nuclear point sources in nearby galaxies whose X-ray luminosity exceeds the theoretical maximum for spherical infall (the Eddington limit) onto stellar-mass black holes. Their luminosity ranges from erg s(0.5 - 10 keV) erg s. Since higher masses imply less extreme ratios of the luminosity to the isotropic Eddington limit theoretical models have focused on black hole rather than neutron star systems. The most challenging sources to explain are those at the luminous end ( > erg s), which require black hole masses MBH >50 solar masses and/or significant departures from the standard thin disk accretion that powers bright Galactic X-ray binaries. Here we report broadband X-ray observations of the nuclear region of the galaxy M82, which contains two bright ULXs. The observations reveal…
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