Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2003-09-01
Astrophys.J.603:L41-L44,2004
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
4 pages, 2 figure, ApJ Letters, in press (correct figure 2 included in this version)
Scientific paper
10.1086/382953
We consider observational tests for the nature of Ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs). These must distinguish between thermal-timescale mass transfer on to stellar-mass black holes leading to anisotropic X-ray emission, and accretion on to intermediate-mass black holes. We suggest that long-term transient behavior via the thermal-viscous disk instability could discriminate between these two possibilities for ULXs in regions of young stellar populations. Thermal-timescale mass transfer generally produces stable disks and persistent X-ray emission. In contrast, mass transfer from massive stars to black holes produces unstable disks and thus transient behavior, provided that the black hole mass exceeds some minimum value. This minimum mass depends primarily on the donor mass and evolutionary state. We show that it exceeds 50 solar masses for a large fraction (greater than 90%) of the mass-transfer lifetime for the most likely donors in young clusters. Thus if long-term monitoring reveals a large transient fraction among ULXs in a young stellar population, these systems would be good candidates for intermediate-mass black holes in a statistical sense; information about the donor star is needed to make this identification secure in any individual case. A transient ULX population would imply a much larger population of quiescent systems of the same type.
Henninger Michael
Ivanova Natalia
Kalogera Vassiliki
King Andrew R.
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