Puzzling accretion onto a black hole in the ultraluminous X-ray source M101 ULX-1
Abstract
There are two proposed explanations for ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) with luminosities in excess of 1039 erg s-1. They could be intermediate-mass black holes (more than 100-1,000, solar masses, M) radiating at sub-maximal (sub-Eddington) rates, as in Galactic black-hole X-ray binaries but with larger, cooler accretion disks. Alternatively, they could be stellar-mass black holes radiating at Eddington or super-Eddington rates. On its discovery, M101 ULX-1 had a luminosity of 3×1039 erg s-1 and a supersoft thermal disk spectrum with an exceptionally low temperature -- uncomplicated by photons energized by a corona of hot electrons -- more consistent with the expected appearance of an accreting intermediate-mass black hole. Here we report optical spectroscopic monitoring of M101 ULX-1. We confirm the previous suggestion that the system contains a Wolf-Rayet star, and reveal that the orbital period is 8.2 days. The black hole has a minimum mass of 5M, and more probably a mass of 20-30M, but we argue that it is very unlikely to be an intermediate-mass black hole. Therefore its exceptionally soft spectra at high Eddinton ratios violate the expectations for accretion onto stellar-mass black holes. Accretion must occur from captured stellar wind, which has hitherto been thought to be so inefficient that it could not power an ultraluminous source.
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