Optically thick outflows in ultraluminous supersoft sources
Ryan Urquhart, Roberto Soria

TL;DR
This study investigates ultraluminous supersoft sources (ULSs), proposing they are ULXs viewed through dense, optically thick winds that form large photospheres, explaining their unique thermal spectra and variability.
Contribution
The paper introduces a model where ULSs are ULXs with dense outflows causing optically thick photospheres, providing new insights into their spectral properties and relation to other X-ray sources.
Findings
ULSs show an anticorrelation between temperature and radius.
ULSs are likely ULXs seen through dense winds.
Transition between ULXs and ULSs occurs at ~150 eV blackbody temperature.
Abstract
Ultraluminous supersoft sources (ULSs) are defined by a thermal spectrum with colour temperatures ~0.1 keV, bolometric luminosities ~ a few 10^39 erg/s, and almost no emission above 1 keV. It has never been clear how they fit into the general scheme of accreting compact objects. To address this problem, we studied a sample of seven ULSs with extensive Chandra and XMM-Newton coverage. We find an anticorrelation between fitted temperatures and radii of the thermal emitter, and no correlation between bolometric luminosity and radius or temperature. We compare the physical parameters of ULSs with those of classical supersoft sources, thought to be surface-nuclear-burning white dwarfs, and of ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs), thought to be super-Eddington stellar-mass black holes. We argue that ULSs are the sub-class of ULXs seen through the densest wind, perhaps an extension of the…
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