Young Black Hole and Neutron Star Systems in the Nearby Star-forming Galaxy M33: The NuSTAR View

Abstract

We can learn about the formation and evolution of compact objects, such as neutron stars and black holes (BHs), by studying the X-ray emission from accreting systems in nearby star-forming galaxies. The hard (E > 10 keV) X-ray emission in particular allows strong discrimination among the accretion states and compact object types. We conducted a NuSTAR survey ( 1/4600 ks) of the Local Group spiral galaxy M33 to study the distribution of X-ray binary (XRB) accretors in an actively star-forming environment. We constructed color-intensity and color-color diagrams to infer XRB accretion states. Using these diagrams, we have classified 28 X-ray sources in M33 by comparing their hard X-ray colors to those of known systems. Four sources lie in the parameter space occupied by X-ray pulsars, while 8, 10, and 4 sources lie in the parameter space occupied by BHs in the hard, intermediate, and soft states, respectively. The known ultraluminous X-ray source M33 X-8 is also found to be consistent with that source type. Some sources overlap within the Z/Atoll sources due to the overlap of the two categories of BHs and Z/Atoll sources. In contrast to a similar NuSTAR survey of M31 (with a low-mass XRB-dominant population), the source population in M33 is dominated by high-mass XRBs (HMXBs), allowing the study of a very different population with similar sensitivity due to the galaxy's similar distance. This characterization of a population of HMXB accretion states will provide valuable constraints for theoretical XRB population synthesis studies to their formation and evolution.

Description

© 2022. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. cc-by

Rights

Availability

Keywords

Citation

Yang, J., Wik, D.R., Lehmer, B.D., West, L.A., Williams, B.F., Maccarone, T.J., Ptak, A., Yukita, M., Vulic, N., Walton, D.J., Garofali, K., & Antoniou, V.. 2022. Young Black Hole and Neutron Star Systems in the Nearby Star-forming Galaxy M33: The NuSTAR View. Astrophysical Journal, 930(1). https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac6351

Collections