ULX-1 in NGC5907: how bright can an accreting pulsar shine? [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1609.07375


Non-nuclear ultraluminous x-ray sources (ULXs) in nearby galaxies shine brighter than any source in our Galaxy. ULXs are usually modeled as stellar-mass black holes accreting at very high rates or intermediate-mass black-holes. We have discovered that ULX-1 in NGC 5907 is an x-ray accreting neutron star (NS) with a spin period evolving from 1.43 s in 2003 to 1.13 s in 2014. With an isotropic peak luminosity of ~500 times the Eddington limit for a NS at 17.1 Mpc, it is the most luminous and distant x-ray pulsar ever detected. Standard accretion models fail to explain its luminosity, even assuming beamed emission. We show that a strong multipolar magnetic field, similar to that of magnetars, can describe its properties. These findings suggest that other extreme ULXs might harbor NSs.

Read this paper on arXiv…

G. Israel, A. Belfiore, L. Stella, et. al.
Mon, 26 Sep 16
39/48

Comments: 29 pages including appendices; 6 figures; submitted on Aug 23, 2016