Suzaku Observations of Spectral Variations of the Ultra Luminous X-ray Source Holmberg IX X-1

Abstract

Observations of the Ultra Luminous X-ray source (ULX) Holmberg IX X-1 were carried out with Suzaku twice, once on 2012 April 13 and then on 2012 October 24, with exposures of 180 ks and 217 ks, respectively. The source showed a hard power-law shape spectrum with a mild cutoff at 8 keV, which is typical of ULXs when they are relatively dim. On both occasions, the 0.6-11 keV spectrum was explained successfully in terms a cool ( 0.2 keV) multi-color disk blackbody emission model and a thermal Comptonization emission produced by an electron cloud with a relatively low temperature and high optical depth, assuming that a large fraction of the disk-blackbody photons are Comptonized whereas the rest is observed directly. The 0.5-10 keV luminosity was 1.2×1040 erg s-1 in April, and 14\% higher in October. This brightening was accompanied by spectral softening in 2 keV, with little changes in the 2 keV spectral shape. This behavior can be understood if the accretion disk remains unchanged, while the electron cloud covers a variable fraction of the disk. The absorbing column density was consistent with the galactic line-of sight value, and did not vary by more than 1.6× 1021 cm-2. Together with the featureless spectra, these properties may not be reconciled easily with the super-critical accretion scenario of this source.

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