Chandra X-ray Sources in M101
W. D. Pence, S. L. Snowden, and K. Mukai (Code 662, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771), K. D. Kuntz (Joint Center for Astrophysics, Department of Physics, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 1000 Hilltop Circle, Baltimore MD 21250)
Abstract
A deep (98.2 ks) Chandra Cycle-1 observation has revealed a
wealth of discrete X-ray sources as well as diffuse emission in the
nearby face-on spiral galaxy M101. From this rich dataset we have
created a catalog of the 110 sources from the S3 chip detected with a
significance of .
This detection threshold corresponds to a
flux of
ergs cm-2 s-1 and a luminosity of
ergs s-1 for a distance to M101 of 7.2 Mpc. The
sources display a distinct correlation with the spiral arms of M101 and
include a variety of X-ray binaries, supersoft sources, supernova
remnants, and other objects of which only
are likely to be
background sources. There are only a few sources in the interarm
regions, and most of these have X-ray colors consistent with that of
background AGNs. The derived
relation for the sources
in M101 (background subtracted) has a slope of
over
the range of
1036 - 1038 ergs s-1. The nucleus is
resolved into 2 nearly identical X-ray sources, each with a 0.5 - 2.0
keV flux of
ergs s-1. One of these sources
coincides with the optical nucleus, and the other coincides with a
cluster of stars 110 pc to the south. The field includes 54 optically
identified SNR, of which 12 are detected by Chandra. Two of the
SNR sources are variable and hence must be compact objects. In total,
8 of the X-ray sources show evidence for short term temporal variation
during this observation. Two of these variable sources are now
brighter than the ROSAT detection threshold, but they were not
detected in the previous ROSAT observations taken in 1992 and
1996. There are also 2 variable sources previously seen with ROSAT that apparently have faded below the Chandra detection
threshold. The brightest source in the field shows extreme long-term
and short-term temporal variability. At it's peak brightness it has a
super-Eddington luminosity >1039 ergs s-1. There are 10
Supersoft sources (SSS) in the field which can be divided into 2
distinct subclasses: the brighter class (3 objects) has a luminosity
of
ergs s-1 and a blackbody temperature of
eV whereas the other class (7 objects) is an order of magnitude fainter
and has a blackbody temperature of only
eV.
CATEGORY: NORMAL GALAXIES