2000ApJ...544L.101S -
Astrophys. J., 544, L101-L105 (2000/December-1)
Resolving the mystery of X-ray-faint elliptical galaxies: Chandra X-ray observations of NGC 4697.
SARAZIN C.L., IRWIN J.A. and BREGMAN J.N.
Abstract (from CDS):
Chandra observations of the X-ray-faint elliptical galaxy NGC 4697 resolve much of the X-ray emission (61% within one effective radius) into ∼80 point sources, of which most are low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs). These LMXBs provide the bulk of the hard emission and much of the soft emission as well. Of the remaining unresolved emission, it is likely that about half is from fainter LMXBs, while the other half (∼23% of the total emission) is from interstellar gas. Three of the resolved sources are supersoft sources. In the outer regions of NGC 4697, eight of the LMXBs (about 25%) are coincident with candidate globular clusters, indicating that globulars have a high probability of containing X-ray binaries compared with the normal stellar population. The X-ray luminosities (0.3-10 keV) of the resolved LMXBs range from ∼5x1037 to ∼2.5x1039 ergs.s–1. The luminosity function of the LMXBs has a ``knee'' at 3.2x1038 ergs.s–1, which is roughly the Eddington luminosity of an 1.4 M☉ neutron star (NS); this knee might be useful as a distance indicator. The highest luminosity source has the Eddington luminosity of an ∼20 M☉ black hole (BH). The presence of this large population of NS and massive BH stellar remnants in this elliptical galaxy shows that it (or its progenitors) once contained a large population of massive main-sequence stars.
Abstract Copyright:
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Journal keyword(s):
Stars: Binaries: Close - Galaxies: Elliptical and Lenticular, cD - Galaxies: ISM - X-Rays: Galaxies - X-Rays: ISM - X-Rays: Stars
Simbad objects:
10
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