Discovery of a new supergiant fast X-ray transient MAXI J0709-159 associated with the Be star LY Canis Majoris

Liu, Zhu; Kawai, Nobuyuki; Shidatsu, Megumi; Iwakiri, Wataru; Mihara, Tatehiro; Nakajima, Motoki; Sugizaki, Mutsumi; Negoro, Hitoshi; Serino, Motoko; Pike, Sean N.; Kennea, Jamie A.; Kobayashi, Kohei; Urabe, Sota

China, Japan, United States, Germany

Abstract

We report on the discovery of a new supergiant fast X-ray transient (SFXT), MAXI J0709-159, and its identification with LY CMa (also known as HD 54786). On 2022 January 25, a new flaring X-ray object, named MAXI J0709-159, was detected by the Monitor of All-sky X-ray Image (MAXI). Two flaring activities were observed in two scans ~3 hr apart, where the 2-10 keV flux reached 5 × 10-9 erg cm-2 s-1. During the period, the source exhibited a large spectral change, suggesting that the absorption column density NH increased from 1022 to 1023 cm-2. A NuSTAR follow-up observation on January 29 identified a new X-ray source with a flux of 6 × 10-13 erg cm-2 s-1 at a position consistent with LY CMa, which has been identified as a B supergiant as well as a Be star, located at a 3 kpc distance. The observed X-ray activity, characterized by short (≲several hours) duration, rapid (≲ a few seconds) variabilities accompanied by spectral changes, and a large luminosity swing (1032-1037 erg s-1), agree with those of SFXTs. On the other hand, optical spectroscopic observations of LY CMa reveal a broad Hα emission line, which may indicate the existence of a Be circumstellar disk. These results suggest that the optical companion, LY CMa, certainly has a complex circumstellar medium including dense clumps.

2022 Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan
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