CXO J004318.8+412016, a steady supersoft X-ray source in M 31

Luna, G. J. M.; Della Valle, M.; de Martino, D.; Munari, U.; Bianchini, A.; Chiosi, E.; Harbeck, D.; Mikolajewska, J.; Orio, Marina; Kotulla, R.; Gallager, J. S.; Zampieri, L.; Kaur, A.; Mapelli, M.; Odendaal, A.; Trinchieri, G.; Wade, J.; Zemko, P.

United States, Italy, Argentina, Poland, South Africa

Abstract

We obtained an optical spectrum of a star we identify as the optical counterpart of the M31 Chandra source CXO J004318.8+412016, because of prominent emission lines of the Balmer series, of neutral helium, and a He II line at 4686 Å. The continuum energy distribution and the spectral characteristics demonstrate the presence of a red giant of K or earlier spectral type, so we concluded that the binary is likely to be a symbiotic system. CXO J004318.8+412016 has been observed in X-rays as a luminous supersoft source (SSS) since 1979, with effective temperature exceeding 40 eV and variable X-ray luminosity, oscillating between a few times 1035 erg s-1 and a few times 1037 erg s-1 in the space of a few weeks. The optical, infrared and ultraviolet colours of the optical object are consistent with an an accretion disc around a compact object companion, which may be either a white dwarf or a black hole, depending on the system parameters. If the origin of the luminous supersoft X-rays is the atmosphere of a white dwarf that is burning hydrogen in shell, it is as hot and luminous as post-thermonuclear flash novae, yet no major optical outburst has ever been observed, suggesting that the white dwarf is very massive (m ≥ 1.2 M) and it is accreting and burning at the high rate \dot{m} > 10^{-8} M yr-1 expected for Type Ia supernovae progenitors. In this case, the X-ray variability may be due to a very short recurrence time of only mildly degenerate thermonuclear flashes.

2017 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
XMM-Newton eHST 4