Two ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) in the nearby Sb galaxy NGC 1313,
named X-1 and X-2, were observed with Suzaku on 2005 September 15. During the
observation for a net exposure of 28~ks (but over a gross time span of 90~ks),
both objects varied in intensity by about 50~%. The 0.4--10 keV X-ray
luminosity of X-1 and X-2 was measured as 2.5×1040ergs−1
and 5.8×1039ergs−1, respectively, with the former the
highest ever reported for this ULX. The spectrum of X-1 can be explained by a
sum of a strong and variable power-law component with a high energy cutoff, and
a stable multicolor blackbody with an innermost disk temperature of ∼0.2
keV. These results suggest that X-1 was in a ``very high'' state, where the
disk emission is strongly Comptonized. The absorber within NGC 1313 toward X-1
is suggested to have a subsolar oxygen abundance. The spectrum of X-2 is best
represented, in its fainter phase, by a multicolor blackbody model with the
innermost disk temperature of 1.2--1.3 keV, and becomes flatter as the source
becomes brighter. Hence X-2 is interpreted to be in a slim-disk state. These
results suggest that the two ULXs have black hole masses of a few tens to a few
hundreds solar masses.Comment: accepted for publication in PAS