4.7 Article

A dipping black hole X-ray binary candidate in NGC 55

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 351, Issue 3, Pages 1063-1070

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2004.07848.x

Keywords

accretion, accretion discs; X-rays : binaries; X-rays : galaxies

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XMM-Newton European Photon Imaging Camera (EPIC) observations have revealed a bright point-like X-ray source in the nearby Magellanic-type galaxy NGC 55. At the distance of NGC 55, the maximum observed X-ray luminosity of the source, designated as XMMU J001528.9 - 391319, is L-x similar to 1.6 x 10(39) erg s(-1), placing the object in the ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) regime. The X-ray light curve exhibits a variety of features including a significant upward drift over the 60 ks observation. Most notably a series of X-ray dips are apparent with individual dips lasting for typically 100-300 s. Some of these dips reach almost 100 per cent diminution of the source flux in the 2.0-4.5 keV band. The EPIC CCD spectra can be modelled with two spectral components, a very soft power-law continuum ( 4) dominant below 2 keV, plus a multicolour disc (MCD) component with an inner-disc temperature kT approximate to 0.8 keV. The observed upward drift in the X-ray flux can be attributed to an increase in the level of the MCD component, whilst the normalization of the power-law continuum remains unchanged. The dipping episodes correspond to a loss of signal from both spectral components, although the blocking factor is at least a factor 2 higher for the MCD component. XMMU J001528.9 391319 can be considered as a candidate black hole binary (BHB) system. A plausible explanation of the observed temporal and spectral behaviour is that we view the accretion disc close to edge-on and that, during dips, orbiting clumps of obscuring material enter our line of sight and cause significant blocking or scattering of the hard thermal X-rays emitted from the inner disc. In contrast, the more extended source of the soft power-law flux is only partially covered by the obscuring matter during the dips.

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