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    A mass of less than 15 solar masses for the black hole in an ultraluminous X-ray source

    204947_204947.pdf (3.308Mb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Motch, C.
    Pakull, M.
    Soria, Roberto
    Grisé, F.
    Pietrzynski, G.
    Date
    2014
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Motch, C. and Pakull, M. and Soria, R. and Grisé, F. and Pietrzynski, G. 2014. A mass of less than 15 solar masses for the black hole in an ultraluminous X-ray source. Nature. 514 7521): pp. 198-201.
    Source Title
    Nature
    DOI
    10.1038/nature13730
    ISSN
    0028-0836
    School
    Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy
    Remarks

    This research was supported under Australian Research Council’s Discovery Projects funding scheme (project number DP120102393)

    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8687
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    Most ultraluminous X-ray sources have a typical set of properties not seen in Galactic stellar-mass black holes. They have luminosities of more than 3 × 10 39 ergs per second, unusually soft X-ray components (with a typical temperature of less than about 0.3 kiloelectronvolts) and a characteristic downturn in their spectra above about 5 kiloelectronvolts. Such puzzling properties have been interpreted either as evidence of intermediate-mass black holes or as emission from stellar-mass black holes accreting above their Eddington limit, analogous to some Galactic black holes at peak luminosity. Recently, a very soft X-ray spectrum was observed in a rare and transient stellar-mass black hole. Here we report that the X-ray source P13 in the galaxy NGC 7793 is in a binary system with a period of about 64 days and exhibits all three canonical properties of ultraluminous sources. By modelling the strong optical and ultraviolet modulations arising from X-ray heating of the B9Ia donor star, we constrain the black hole mass to be less than 15 solar masses. Our results demonstrate that in P13, soft thermal emission and spectral curvature are indeed signatures of supercritical accretion. By analogy, ultraluminous X-ray sources with similar X-ray spectra and luminosities of up to a few times 10 40 ergs per second can be explained by supercritical accretion onto massive stellar-mass black holes.

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