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Published June 1, 2020 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Swift Monitoring of M51: A 38 day Superorbital Period for the Pulsar ULX7 and a New Transient Ultraluminous X-Ray Source

Abstract

We present the results from a monitoring campaign made with the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory of the M51 galaxies, which contain several variable ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs). The ongoing campaign started in 2018 May, and we report here on ~1.5 yr of observations. The campaign, which consists of 106 observations, has a typical cadence of 3–6 days, and has the goal of determining the long-term X-ray variability of the ULXs. Two of the most variable sources were ULX7 and ULX8, both of which are known to be powered by neutron stars that are exceeding their isotropic Eddington luminosities by factors of up to 100. This is further evidence that neutron-star-powered ULXs are the most variable. Our two main results are, first, that ULX7 exhibits a periodic flux modulation with a period of 38 days varying over a magnitude and a half in flux from peak to trough. Since the orbital period of the system is known to be 2 days, the modulation is superorbital, which is a near-ubiquitous property of ULX pulsars. Second, we identify a new transient ULX, M51 XT-1, the onset of which occurred during our campaign, reaching a peak luminosity of ~10⁴⁰ erg s⁻¹, before gradually fading over the next ~200 days until it slipped below the detection limit of our observations. Combined with the high-quality Swift/X-ray Telescope lightcurve of the transient, serendipitous observations made with Chandra and XMM-Newton provide insights into the onset and evolution of a likely super-Eddington event.

Additional Information

© 2020 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2019 December 9; revised 2020 February 19; accepted 2020 March 4; published 2020 June 4. We wish to thank the Swift PI, Brad Cenko for approving the target of opportunity requests we made to observe M51, as well as the rest of the Swift team for carrying them out. We also acknowledge the use of public data from the Swift data archive. This work made use of data supplied by the UK Swift Science Data Centre at the University of Leicester. The work of D.S. was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with NASA. D.J.W. acknowledges support from an STFC Ernest Rutherford Fellowship.

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Published - Brightman_2020_ApJ_895_127.pdf

Submitted - 1912.04431.pdf

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August 22, 2023
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