Spectroscopic comparison between ultraluminous X-ray sources and magnetar bursts
J. J. E. Kajava, F. Rico-Villas

TL;DR
This study compares the spectra of ultra-luminous X-ray sources and magnetar bursts, revealing similar spectral behaviors and suggesting a possible link in their emission mechanisms, especially involving strong magnetic fields and extended photospheres.
Contribution
It provides the first comparative spectral analysis between ULXs and magnetar bursts, highlighting shared spectral variability patterns and physical properties.
Findings
ULXs and magnetar bursts show similar spectral variability trends.
Black body temperature and radius follow comparable inverse-square relations.
Luminosity ratios of black body components are consistent across both classes.
Abstract
Nearby galaxies host ultra-luminous X-ray sources (ULXs), whose nature remains largely unknown. Until the discovery of the first ULX pulsar, M82 X-2, the mechanism powering the large luminosities of most ULXs was thought to be super-Eddington accretion onto black holes. The ULX pulsar clearly indicates that this hypothesis is not universal, and the question arises if other ULXs are as well powered by accretion onto neutron stars. One possibility to have highly super-Eddington luminosity is by reducing the opacity by strong magnetic fields as in magnetars, as proposed for M82 X-2. To study the link between ULXs and magnetar bursts/flares, we have performed a comparative spectral study between these classes, which both emit at similar super-Eddington luminosities at around erg s. We find that, when their spectra are fitted with dual thermal models, the long term…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Calibration and Measurement Techniques · Advanced X-ray Imaging Techniques
