X-ray spectral and optical properties of a ULX in NGC 4258 (M106)

Abstract

We study the X-ray and optical properties of the ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) X-6 in the nearby galaxy NGC 4258 (M106) based on the archival XMM-Newton, Chandra, Swift, and Hubble Space Telescope ( HST) observations. The source has a peak luminosity of LX 2 × 1039 erg s-1 in the XMM-Newton observation of 2004 June. Consideration of the hardness ratios and spectral model parameters shows that the source seems to exhibit possible spectral variations throughout the X-ray observations. In the images from the HST/Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), three optical sources have been identified as counterpart candidates within the 1σ error radius of 0.3. The brightest one has an absolute magnitude of MV ≈ -7.0 and shows extended structure. The remaining two sources have absolute magnitudes of MV ≈ -5.8 and -5.3 mag. The possible spectral types of the candidates from brightest to dimmest were determined as B6-A5, B0-A7, and B2-A3, respectively. The counterparts of the X-ray source possibly belong to a young star cluster. Neither the standard disk model nor the slim disk model provides firm evidence to determine the spectral characteristics of ULX X-6. We argue that the mass of the compact object lies in the range 10-15M indicating that the compact source is most likely a stellar-mass black hole.

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