Revisiting multiwavelength data on the supersoft X-ray source CAL 83 [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.06804


In this study we revisit public data on the supersoft X-ray source CAL 83 in the Large Magellanic Cloud. A significant part of our analysis is focused on XMM-Newton X-ray observations, in which updated data reduction procedures and quality assessment were applied. We report on the capability of publicly available hot atmosphere models in describing the source’s soft X-ray spectrum. By gathering historical flux measurements in multiple wavelengths and comparing them with the fluxes derived from the X-ray analysis, we find that a $\sim$ 360 kK phenomenological blackbody model describes the spectral energy distribution of CAL 83 fairly well. We also retrieve data from the XMM-Newton UV/optical camera, which is co-alligned with the X-ray instruments and provides strictly simultaneous measurements. These observations demonstrate that the X-ray emission is definitely anti-correlated with emission at longer wavelengths in a time-scale of days to weeks. A closer look at simultaneous X-ray and UV count rates in single light curves reveals that the anti-correlated behaviour is actually present in time scales as short as minutes, suggesting that the origin of variable emission in the system is not unique.

Read this paper on arXiv…

P. Stecchini, M. Diaz, F. D’Amico, et. al.
Mon, 17 Apr 23
8/51

Comments: 9 pages, 8 figures. To be published in MNRAS