986 research outputs found
Limits on [OIII] 5007 emission from NGC4472's globular clusters: constraints on planetary nebulae and ultraluminous black hole X-ray binaries in globular clusters
We have searched for [OIII] 5007 emission in high resolution spectroscopic
data from Flames/Giraffe VLT observations of 174 massive globular clusters
(GCs) in NGC4472. No planetary nebulae (PNe) are observed in these clusters,
constraining the number of PNe per bolometric luminosity,
\alpha<0.8*10^{-7}PN/L_{\odot}. This is significantly lower than the rate
predicted from stellar evolution, if all stars produce PNe. Comparing our
results to populations of PNe in galaxies, we find most galaxies have a higher
\alpha than these GCs (more PNe per bolometric luminosity - though some massive
early-type galaxies do have similarly low \alpha). The low \alpha required in
these GCs suggests that the number of PNe per bolometric luminosity does not
increase strongly with decreasing mass or metallicity of the stellar
population. We find no evidence for correlations between the presence of known
GC PNe and either the presence of low mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) or the
stellar interaction rates in the GCs. This, and the low \alpha observed,
suggests that the formation of PNe may not be enhanced in tight binary systems.
These data do identify one [OIII] emission feature, this is the (previously
published) broad [OIII] emission from the cluster RZ 2109. This emission is
thought to originate from the LMXB in this cluster, which is accreting at
super-Eddington rates. The absence of any similar [OIII] emission from the
other clusters favors the hypothesis that this source is a black hole LMXB,
rather than a neutron star LMXB with significant geometric beaming of its X-ray
emission.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The faint 2005 hard state outburst of Aquila X-1 seen by INTEGRAL and RXTE
We report on the spectral analysis of RXTE and INTEGRAL data of the 2005
April outburst of the transient Atoll source Aql X-1. Although this outburst is
one of the faintest ever detected for this source in the soft X-rays
(RXTE/ASM), one of our INTEGRAL observations, taken close to the soft X-ray
peak, shows that the source flux was quite high, with a 20-200 keV flux of 2.05
x 10^-9 erg cm^-2 s^-1. On this occasion we detect the source up to 150 keV for
the first time. We compare and discuss the similarity of the source behavior
with that of black hole transients especially XTE J1550-564.Comment: 4 pages 2 figures, Accepted for publication in A&A as a RESEARCH NOT
Some Constraints On the Effects of Age and Metallicity on the Low Mass X-ray Binary Formation Rate
We have studied the low mass X-ray binary (LMXB) populations within and
outside globular clusters (GC) in NGC 4365 and NGC 3115. Using published age
and metallicity constraints from optical and IR observations of their GCs, we
do not find any evidence for an increase in the LMXB formation rate in the
intermediate age cluster population of NGC 4365, as has been proposed in some
scenarios of dynamical LMXB formation in GCs. The old, metal-rich, red
population of GCs in NGC 3115 on the other hand is {\it at least} three times
as efficient at creating LMXBs as the old, metal-poor, blue clusters. These
data suggest that the higher formation efficiency of LMXBs in the red GC
subsystems of many galaxies is largely a consequence of their higher
metallicity. A comparison of the densities of field LMXBs in different galaxies
does not reveal an obvious correlation with the age of the field stars as
predicted by models in which the LMXB formation rate in the field drops
monotonically with time after an initial burst. This suggests that either a
significant fraction of the field LMXBs are created in GCs and subsequently
injected into the field, or the LMXB formation rate has a more complex time
evolution pattern.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters. 7 pages including 5 figure
A new globular cluster black hole in NGC 4472
We discuss CXOU~1229410+075744, a new black hole candidate in a globular
cluster in the elliptical galaxy NGC~4472. By comparing two Chandra
observations of the galaxy, we find a source that varies by at least a factor
of 4, and has a peak luminosity of at least ergs/sec. As such,
the source varies by significantly more than the Eddington luminosity for a
single neutron star, and is a strong candidate for being a globular cluster
black hole. The source's X-ray spectrum also evolves in a manner consistent
with what would be expected from a single accreting stellar mass black hole. We
consider the properties of the host cluster of this source and the six other
strong black hole X-ray binary candidates, and find that there is suggestive
evidence that black hole X-ray binary formation is favored in bright and metal
rich clusters, just as is the case for bright X-ray sources in general.Comment: 6 pages, one 2-panel figure, 2 tables; accepted to MNRA
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