Luminous X-Ray Flares from Low-Mass X-Ray Binary Candidates in the Early-Type Galaxy NGC 4697
Citations Over TimeTop 20% of 2005 papers
Abstract
We report results of the first search specifically targeting short-timescale X-ray flares from low-mass X-ray binaries in an early-type galaxy. A new method for flare detection is presented. In NGC 4697, the nearest, optically luminous, X-ray faint elliptical galaxy, 3 out of 157 sources are found to display flares at >99.95% probability, and all show more than one flare. Two sources are coincident with globular clusters and show flare durations and luminosities similar to (but larger than) Type-I X-ray superbursts found in Galactic neutron star (NS) X-ray binaries (XRBs). The third source shows more extreme flares. Its flare luminosity (~6E39 erg/s) is very super-Eddington for an NS and is similar to the peak luminosities of the brightest Galactic black hole (BH) XRBs. However, the flare duration (~70 s) is much shorter than are typically seen for outbursts reaching those luminosities in Galactic BH sources. Alternative models for the flares are considered.
Related Papers
- → POLARIZATION IN LINES—A NEW METHOD FOR MEASURING BLACK HOLE MASSES IN ACTIVE GALAXIES(2015)36 cited
- → Wolf 424: A Neglected Flare Star(1973)18 cited
- → A ~1-hour X-ray periodicity in an active galaxy RE J1034+396(2008)3 cited
- → The properties of emission lines and their correlations in spectra of Active Galactic Nuclei(2012)