On the compact nature of the most luminous ULX in the Cartwheel ring
Abstract
We report the first detection of flux variability in the most luminous X-ray source in the southern ring of the Cartwheel galaxy. XMM--Newton data show that the luminosity has varied over a timescale of six months from L[0.5-10] keV \~1.3 1041 erg/s, consistent with the previous Chandra observation, to L[0.5-10] keV < 6.4 x1040 erg/s. This fact provides the first evidence that the source is compact in nature and is not a collection of individual fainter sources, such as supernova remnants. The source has been repeatedly observed at the very high luminosity level of L[0.5-10] keV ~1.3 x 1041 erg/s, for a period of at least 4 years before dimming at the current level. It represents then the first example of an accreting object revealed in a long lived state of extremely high luminosity.
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