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Hard X-ray flares and spectral variability in NGC 4395 ULX1

Tanuman Ghosh Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Raman Research Institute, C. V. Raman Avenue, Sadashivanagar, Bangalore 560080, India Vikram Rana Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Raman Research Institute, C. V. Raman Avenue, Sadashivanagar, Bangalore 560080, India Matteo Bachetti Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica-Osservatorio Astronomico di Cagliari, via della Scienza 5, I-09047 Selargius (CA), Italy
Abstract

We report the detection of flaring events in NGC 4395 ULX1, a nearby ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX), for the first time, using recent XMM-NEWTON observations. The flaring episodes are spectrally harder than the steady emission intervals, resulting in higher fractional variability in the high energy regime. A thin Keplerian and a slim accretion disk provide the best-fit continuum for XMM-NEWTON spectra. All observations show a broad hump-like feature around 0.9\sim 0.9 keV, which can be associated with a collection of blended emission lines, and suggests the presence of a wind/outflow in this ULX through comparison with other ULXs that show a similar feature. The flaring spectra correspond to higher slim disk temperatures due to higher mass accretion rate under an advection-dominated accretion scenario. The luminosity-temperature (L-T) values in different flux states show a positive trend. When characterized with a powerlaw relation, the L-T profile is broadly consistent with both LT2L\propto T^{2} and LT4L\propto T^{4} relations for the analysed data. The empirical predictions for a slim accretion disk in the case of super-Eddington accretion onto a stellar-mass compact object is LT2L\propto T^{2} which is a possible scenario in ULX1. The origin of the flaring events is understood as an intrinsic change of accretion rate or presence of variable clumpy wind in the inner region of the accretion disk.

Ultraluminous x-ray sources (2164) — X-ray binary stars (1811)

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