Linking soft excess in ultraluminous X-ray sources with optically thick wind driven by supercritical accretion
Yanli Qiu, Hua Feng

TL;DR
This study examines whether the soft X-ray emission in ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) originates from optically thick winds driven by supercritical accretion, using high-quality spectra and wind models.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking the soft emission component in ULXs to the photosphere of supercritical accretion-driven winds, and discusses implications for accretion physics.
Findings
Soft component modeled as nearly constant luminosity blackbody emission.
PULXs show lower blackbody luminosity, often below Eddington limit.
Inferred accretion rates suggest supercritical accretion in ULXs.
Abstract
Supercritical accretion onto compact objects may drive massive winds that are nearly spherical, optically thick, and Eddington limited. Blackbody emission from the photosphere is the direct observational signature of the wind. Here we investigate whether or not it can explain the soft emission component seen in the energy spectra of ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs). Based on high-quality XMM-Newton spectra of 15 ULXs, we find that the soft component can be modeled as blackbody emission with a nearly constant luminosity, and the 5 known pulsating ULXs (PULXs) in the sample display a blackbody luminosity among the lowest. These are consistent with the scenario that the soft emission originates from the photosphere of the optically thick wind. However, the derived blackbody luminosity for PULXs is significantly above the Eddington limit for neutron stars. A possible explanation is that a…
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