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    Optical counterpart of HLX-1 during the 2010 outburst

    219007_68363_70395_publishedversion.pdf (1.935Mb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Soria, Roberto
    Hakala, P.
    Hau, G.
    Gladstone, J.
    Kong, A.
    Date
    2012
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Soria, R. and Hakala, P. and Hau, G. and Gladstone, J. and Kong, A. 2012. Optical counterpart of HLX-1 during the 2010 outburst. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 420: pp. 3599-3608.
    Source Title
    Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
    DOI
    10.1111/j.1365-2966.2011.20281.x
    ISSN
    1365-2966
    School
    Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy (Physics)
    Remarks

    This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, ©: 2012, the authors and the Royal Astronomical Society. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/3803
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    We studied the optical counterpart of the intermediate-mass black hole candidate HLX-1 in ESO 243-49. We used a set of Very Large Telescope imaging observations from 2010 November, integrated by Swift X-ray data from the same epoch. We measured standard Vega brightnesses U= 23.89 ± 0.18 mag, B= 25.19 ± 0.30 mag, V= 24.79 ± 0.34 mag and R= 24.71 ± 0.40 mag. Therefore, the source was ˜1 mag fainter in each band than in a set of Hubble Space Telescope images taken a couple of months earlier, when the X-ray flux was a factor of 2 higher. We conclude that during the 2010 September observations, the optical counterpart was dominated by emission from an irradiated disc (which responds to the varying X-ray luminosity), rather than by a star cluster around the black hole (which would not change). We modelled the Comptonized, irradiated X-ray spectrum of the disc, and found that the optical luminosity and colours in the 2010 November data are still consistent with emission from the irradiated disc, with a characteristic outer radius rout˜ 2800rin˜ 1013 cm and a reprocessing fraction ˜2 × 10-3. The optical colours are also consistent with a stellar population with age ?6 Myr (at solar metallicity) and mass ˜104 Msun; this is only an upper limit to the mass, if there is also a significant contribution from an irradiated disc. We strongly rule out the presence of a young superstar cluster, which would be too bright. An old globular cluster might be associated with HLX-1, as long as its mass ?2 × 106 Msun for an age of 10 Gyr, but it cannot significantly contribute to the observed very blue and variable optical/ultraviolet emission.

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