Recurring X-ray Outbursts in the Supernova Impostor SN~2010da in NGC~300
B. Binder, B. F. Williams, A. K. H. Kong, T. J. Gaetz, P. P., Plucinsky, E. D. Skillman, A. Dolphin

TL;DR
This study presents new X-ray and optical observations of SN 2010da, suggesting it is a high-mass X-ray binary with a neutron star and a luminous blue variable-like star, possibly marking the first observation of a massive progenitor binary evolving into an HMXB.
Contribution
First detailed multi-wavelength study indicating SN 2010da as a potential HMXB with a young age, linking supernova impostor phenomena to binary evolution.
Findings
X-ray flux increased by a factor of 10 over 6 months.
X-ray spectrum varies with luminosity, indicating spectral state changes.
Progenitor system estimated to be less than 5 million years old.
Abstract
We present new observations of the "supernova impostor" SN 2010da using the Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Hubble Space Telescope. During the initial 2010 outburst, the 0.3-10 keV luminosity was observed by Swift to be erg s and faded by a factor of 25 in a four month period. Our two new Chandra observations show a factor of 10 increase in the 0.35-8 keV X-ray flux, from 4 erg s to erg s in 6 months, and the X-ray spectrum is consistent in both observations with a power law photon index of . We find evidence of X-ray spectral state changes: when SN 2010da is in a high-luminosity state, the X-ray spectrum is harder () compared to the low-luminosity state (). Using our Hubble observations, we fit the color magnitude diagram of the coeval…
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