Magnetic field strength of a neutron-star-powered ultraluminous X-ray source
Murray Brightman, Fiona A. Harrison, Felix Fuerst, Matthew J., Middleton, Dominic J. Walton, Daniel Stern, Andrew C. Fabian, Marianne Heida,, Didier Barret, Matteo Bachetti

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of a cyclotron resonance scattering feature in a ULX in M51, suggesting the neutron star has an extremely strong magnetic field near 10^{15} G, which helps explain its super-Eddington luminosity.
Contribution
First detection of a CRSF in a ULX, indicating a magnetar-level magnetic field on the neutron star, advancing understanding of ULX accretion physics.
Findings
Detected a 4.5 keV absorption line at 3.8-σ significance in a ULX spectrum.
Line shape consistent with a proton resonance scattering feature, implying B~10^{15} G.
Supports the hypothesis that some ULXs are powered by highly magnetized neutron stars.
Abstract
Ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) are bright X-ray sources in nearby galaxies not associated with the central supermassive black hole. Their luminosities imply they are powered by either an extreme accretion rate onto a compact stellar remnant, or an intermediate mass ( M) black hole. The recent detection of coherent pulsations coming from three bright ULXs demonstrates that some of these sources are powered by accretion onto a neutron star, implying accretion rates significantly in excess of the Eddington limit, a high degree of geometric beaming, or both. The physical challenges associated with the high implied accretion rates can be mitigated if the neutron star surface field is high - in the magnetar regime ( G), since this suppresses the electron scattering cross section, reducing the radiation pressure that chokes off accretion for high…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear Physics and Applications · Geophysics and Sensor Technology · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
