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Published March 10, 2020 | Accepted Version + Published
Journal Article Open

The (Re)appearance of NGC 925 ULX-3, a New Transient ULX

Abstract

We report the discovery of a third ULX in NGC 925 (ULX-3), detected in 2017 November by Chandra at a luminosity of L_X = (7.8 ± 0.8) × 10³⁹ erg s⁻¹. Examination of archival data for NGC 925 reveals that ULX-3 was detected by Swift at a similarly high luminosity in 2011, as well as by XMM-Newton in 2017 January at a much lower luminosity of L_X = (3.8 ± 0.5) × 10³⁸ erg s⁻¹. With an additional Chandra nondetection in 2005, this object demonstrates a high dynamic range of flux of factor ≳26. In its high-luminosity detections, ULX-3 exhibits a hard power-law spectrum with Γ = 1.6 ± 0.1, whereas the XMM-Newton detection is slightly softer, with Γ = 1.8_(-0.1)^(+0.2), and is also well-fitted with a broadened disk model. The long-term light curve is sparsely covered and could be consistent either with the propeller effect or with a large-amplitude superorbital period, both of which are seen in ULXs, in particular those with neutron star accretors. Further systematic monitoring of ULX-3 will allow us to determine the mechanism by which ULX-3 undergoes its extreme variability and to better understand the accretion processes of ULXs.

Additional Information

© 2020. The American Astronomical Society. Received 2019 November 20; revised 2020 January 31; accepted 2020 February 17; published 2020 March 16. We thank our anonymous referee for useful comments on this paper. This work was supported under NASA contract NNG08FD60C. D.J.W. and M.J.M. acknowledge support from STFC in the form of Ernest Rutherford Fellowships. T.P.R. was funded as part of the STFC consolidated grant ST/K000861/1, and R.S. was funded by STFC studentship grant ST/N50404X/1. The scientific results reported in this article are based on observations made by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, as well as archival observations by XMM-Newton, an ESA science mission with instruments and contributions directly funded by ESA Member States and NASA, archival observations by the NuSTAR mission, a project led by the California Institute of Technology, managed by JPL, and funded by NASA, and observations from the Swift data archive. Facilities: XMM - Newton X-Ray Multimirror Mission satellite, CXO - , Swift(XRT) - , NuSTAR. - Software: astropy (Astropy Collaboration et al. 2013), CIAO (Fruscione et al. 2006), FTOOLS (Nasa High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center (Heasarc), 2014), XMM-Newton SAS.

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Published - Earnshaw_2020_ApJ_891_153.pdf

Accepted Version - 2001.00642.pdf

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August 22, 2023
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