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X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies Vicky Kalogera Northwestern University Super Star Clusters Starburst galaxies Ultra-Luminous X-Ray Sources Elliptical galaxies

X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

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Vicky Kalogera Northwestern University. X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies. Super Star Clusters Starburst galaxies Ultra-Luminous X-Ray Sources Elliptical galaxies. Chandra observations of XRBs - some of the puzzles -. How does XRB formation and evolution depend on - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Vicky Kalogera Northwestern University

• Super Star Clusters

• Starburst galaxies

• Ultra-Luminous X-Ray Sources

• Elliptical galaxies

Page 2: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Chandra observations of XRBs - some of the puzzles -

How does XRB formation and evolution depend on star-formation history and metallicity ?

Do Super Star Clusters form High-Mass XRBs ?

What determines the shape of X-Ray Luminosity Functions (XLF) ? Is it due to a blend of different XRB populations ?

What is the nature of Ultra-Luminous X-ray Sources (ULX) ?

Page 3: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Super-Star Clusters (SSCs)

• Compact, young analog to globular clusters• Found frequently in starburst environments

• Masses range from ~104 to ~106 M

•Ages range from a few to tens of Myr

Page 4: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Kaaret et al. 2004

• Lx ≥ (0.5-3)x1036 erg/s

Distribution of X-Ray point sources

< 1 XRB per cluster!

Page 5: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Kaaret et al. 2004

• Lx ≥ 5x1035 erg/s

Distribution of X-Ray point sources

• XRBs closely associated with star clusters• Median distance ~30-100 pc

< 1 XRB per cluster!M82N5253

N1569

50%

Is this all due to Is this all due to Supernova Kicks ?Supernova Kicks ?

Page 6: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Theoretical XRB Distributions

• cluster mass: ~5x104 Mo

• LX > 5x1035 erg/s• average of 1,000 cluster simulations

• Significant age dependence

• < 1 XRB per cluster

Models: Population Syntheses of XRBs and Kinematic Orbit Evolution in Cluster Potential

Sepinsky et al. 2005, ApJL

Page 7: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Conclusions

XRB models without cluster dynamics appear in agreement with observations

Mean XRB number per SSC < 1 and spatial distribution: M < 105 Mo and 10-50Myr or more massive and ~50Myr

• Results do not appear sensitive to binary evolution assumptions, but extended parameter study is needed.• Explore role of dynamics for more massive and older clusters

Supernova kicks: eject XRBs @ D > 10pc especially for M < 105 Mo

Page 8: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

NGC 1569NGC 1569(post-)starburst galaxy at 2.2Mpcwith well-constrained SF history: > ~100Myr-long episode, probably ended 5-10Myr ago, Z ~ 0.25 Zo

> older population with

continuous SF for ~ 1.5Gyr, Z ~ 0.004 or 0.0004, but weaker in SFR than

recent episode by factors of >10

Vallenari & Bomans 1996;Greggio et al. 1998;Aloisi et al. 2001; Martin et al. 2002

courtesySchirmer, HST

courtesyMartin, CXC,NOAO

Page 9: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Belczynski, VKet al. 2004, ApJL

NGC 1569 XLF modeling

Hybrid of 2 populations:

underlying old starburst young

Old: 1.5 GyrYoung: 110 MyrSFR Y/O: 20

Old: 1.5 GyrYoung: 70 MyrSFR Y/O: 20

Old: 1.3 GyrYoung: 70 MyrSFR Y/O: 40

Page 10: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Conclusions on Starbursts

Current understanding of XRB formation and evolution produces XLF properties consistent with observations Model XLFs can be used to constrain star-formation properties, e.g., age and metallicity

Shape of model XLFs appear robust against variations of most binary evolution parameters

Page 11: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Ultra-Luminous X-ray Sources

First discovered with Einstein X-ray telescope

Extragalactic sources with LX ≥ 1039 erg/s

Later observations determined many are off-nuclear & not associated with supernovae

What is the origin of these sources?

Intermediate-Mass Black Holes? (50 - 1000Mo)

Strongly Anisotropic XRB emission ?

Page 12: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

IMBH Binaries ?

Cluster core simulations with binary evolution and multi-body dynamical interactions

Do IMBH acquire mass-transfering binary companions in cluster cores ?

Blecha, Ivanova, VK et al. 2005

Page 13: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

IMBH Companions

Mass Mass distributiondistribution

Orbital separation Orbital separation distributiondistribution

Page 14: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies
Page 15: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Conclusions on IMBH Binaries

• Optimal IMBH mass range: 100-200 Mo

• MT is relatively rare; highest incidence at 100Mo

about 3-5% of cluster lifetime with MT IMBH binary

• MS mass-transferring companions are more common & spend more time in MT

BUT ARE THEY ULXs?Blecha, Ivanova, VK et al. 2005

Page 16: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

Brightest XRBs in Elliptical Galaxies

Upper-end XLF slope (LX: from ~0.5 - 2 1039 erg/s) :

footprint of accreting BH mass spectrummodified by probability of XRB detection due to

transient mode of accretion

Ivanova & VK 2005, ApJ

Page 17: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies
Page 18: X-ray Binaries in Nearby Galaxies

What to Expect in the Future ?

For example:

* Long-term time monitoring will become possible; identification of X-ray transients and clues to ULX nature

* Bigger source samples will allow probing the rarebrightest sources and questions of BH formation

* Systematic modeling of galaxy samples will reveal sensitivity to SFR and Z …