A broadband X-ray spectral study of the intermediate-mass black hole candidate M82 X-1 with NuSTAR, Chandra and Swift
Murray Brightman, Fiona A. Harrison, Didier Barret, Shane W. Davis,, Felix F\"urst, Kristin K. Madsen, Matthew Middleton, Jon M. Miller, Daniel, Stern, Lian Tao, Dominic J. Walton

TL;DR
This study uses simultaneous X-ray observations to analyze M82 X-1, revealing it is likely a super-Eddington accretor with a flatter disk temperature profile, challenging the intermediate-mass black hole interpretation.
Contribution
It provides evidence that M82 X-1 is a super-Eddington accretor with a slim disk, challenging previous assumptions of it being an intermediate-mass black hole based on spectral modeling.
Findings
Spectral data favor super-Eddington accretion with slim disk characteristics.
Thin-disk models are unphysical at high accretion rates.
Mass estimates suggest either a stellar-remnant black hole or an IMBH.
Abstract
M82 X-1 is one of the brightest ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) known, which, assuming Eddington-limited accretion and other considerations, makes it one of the best intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH) candidates. However, the ULX may still be explained by super-Eddington accretion onto a stellar-remnant black hole. We present simultaneous NuSTAR, Chandra and Swift/XRT observations during the peak of a flaring episode with the aim of modeling the emission of M82 X-1 and yielding insights into its nature. We find that thin-accretion disk models all require accretion rates at or above the Eddington limit in order to reproduce the spectral shape, given a range of black hole masses and spins. Since at these high Eddington ratios the thin-disk model breaks down due to radial advection in the disk, we discard the results of the thin-disk models as unphysical. We find that the temperature…
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