Wind-powered ultraluminous X-ray sources
Grzegorz Wiktorowicz, Jean-Pierre Lasota, Krzysztof Belczynski, Youjun, Lu, Jifeng Liu, Krystian I{\l}kiewicz

TL;DR
This study models wind-fed ultra-luminous X-ray sources (ULXs), especially those with red supergiant donors, estimating their contribution to ULX populations across different environments and their potential evolution into double compact objects.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive theoretical analysis of wind-fed ULXs and their role in the overall ULX population, highlighting the significance of RSG donors.
Findings
Wind-fed ULXs could constitute up to 75-96% of ULXs in young star-forming regions.
Approximately 49-87% of ULXs in environments with constant star formation may be wind-fed.
Less than 1% of ULXs in old, inactive environments are wind-fed.
Abstract
Although ultra-luminous X-ray sources (ULX) are important for astrophysics due to their extreme apparent super-Eddington luminosities, their nature is still poorly known. Theoretical and observational studies suggest that ULXs could be a diversified group of objects composed of low-mass X-ray binaries, high-mass X-ray binaries and marginally also systems containing intermediate-mass black holes, which is supported by their presence in a variety of environments. Observational data on the ULX donors could significantly boost our understanding of these systems, but only a few were detected. There are several candidates, mostly red supergiants (RSGs), but surveys are typically biased toward luminous near-infrared objects. Nevertheless, it is worth exploring if RSGs can be members of ULX binaries. In such systems matter accreted onto the compact body would have to be provided by the stellar…
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