4.7 Article

NATURE OF THE SOFT ULX IN NGC 247: SUPER-EDDINGTON OUTFLOW AND TRANSITION BETWEEN THE SUPERSOFT AND SOFT ULTRALUMINOUS REGIMES

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 831, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/0004-637X/831/2/117

Keywords

accretion, accretion disks; black hole physics; galaxies: individual (NGC 247); X-rays: binaries

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11633003]
  2. Tsinghua University Initiative Scientific Research Program
  3. STScI [HST-GO-13425]

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We report on XMM-Newton/Chandra/Swift/Hubble Space Telescope observations of the ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) in NGC 247, which is found to make transitions between the supersoft ultraluminous (SSUL) regime with a spectrum dominated by a cool (similar to 0.1 keV) blackbody component and the soft ultraluminous (SUL) regime with comparable luminosities shared by the blackbody and power-law components. Multi-epoch observations revealed an anti-correlation between the blackbody radius and temperature, R-bb proportional to T-bb(-2.8 +/- 0.3), ruling out a standard accretion disk as the origin of the soft X-ray emission. The soft X-ray emission is much more variable on both short and long timescales in the SSUL regime than in the SUL regime. We suggest that the SSUL regime may be an extension of the ultraluminous state toward the high accretion end, being an extreme case of the SUL regime, with the blackbody emission arising from the photosphere of thick outflows and the hard X-rays being emission leaked from the embedded accretion disk via the central low-density funnel or advected through the wind. However, the scenario that the supersoft ULXs are standard ULXs viewed nearly edge-on cannot be ruled out. Flux dips on a timescale of 200 s were observed. The dips cannot be explained by an increase of absorption, but could be due to the change of accretion rate or related to thermal fluctuations in the wind or disk. The optical emission of NGC 247 ULX exhibits a blackbody spectrum at a temperature of 19,000. K with a radius of 20 R-circle dot, likely arising from an OB supergiant companion star.

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