Title: Holger Stiele
1Supersoft sources in M 31 Comparing the
XMM-Newton Deep Survey, ROSAT and Chandra
catalogues
SuperSoft X-ray Sources New Developments
ESAC Madrid 20.05.2009
2The Large Program Collaboration
19 scientists from 7 countries
- PI W.Pietsch (MPE)
- MPE V. Burwitz, M. Freyberg, J. Greiner, F.
Haberl, H. Stiele - And R. Barnard (The Open University), D.
Hatzidimitriou (University of Crete), M. Hernanz
(CSIC-IEEC), G. Israel (INAF), U. Kolb (The Open
University), A. Kong (National Tsing Hua
University), P. Plucinsky (Harvard-Smithsonian
Centre for Astrophysics), P. Reig (IESL), G. Sala
(UPC/IEEC), M. Sasaki (Harvard-Smithsonian Centre
for Astrophysics), L. Shaw Greening (The Open
University), L. Stella (INAF), B. Williams
(Pennsylvania State University)
3Outline
- The XMM-Newton Deep Survey catalogue
- Supersoft sources ? optical novae
- Comparing the XMM-Newton Deep Survey, ROSAT and
Chandra catalogues - The catalogues
- The method
- The results
4Image
- of Deep survey (outer ring) and archival
(major axis) data (see Pietsch et al. 2005) - Fields with high background repeated
- Optical extent indicated by D25 ellipse
-
-
-
0.2 1 keV1 2 keV2 12 keV
SSSs fgstars SNRs hard (AGNs,XRBs,Crab like
SNR)
Extended sources ? mostly background galaxy
clusters
5Hardness Ratios
X-ray colour
i 14
B1 0.2-0.5 keVB2 0.5-1.0 keVB3 1.0-2.0
keVB4 2.0-4.5 keVB5 4.5- 12 keV
? XRB? SSS? SNR
Further classification methods
- Extent
- Time variability
- Cross correlations with optical and radio source
catalogues
6X-ray Sources in M 31 Field Identification and
Classification
- identified classified
- SSS 43
- SNR 25 38
- Globular clusters 36 17
- XRB 10 22
- foreground stars 22 243
- AGN 3 49
- Galaxies 4 21
- Galaxy clusters 1 1
- Hard 1289
- Without 127
7Supersoft Sources
- Definition
- Radiation with effective temperature of 10 to 100
eV - Luminosities 1036-39 erg s-1
- HR1 lt 0 and HR2 - EHR2 lt -0.96 or HR2 not
defined, HR3, HR4 not defined - 43 SSSs, 27 new
8Flux Distribution
Blackbody model withTbb 50 eVNH 6.6?1020
cm-2 Unabs. fluxes
Novae
- Period 217s Trudolyubov Priedhorsky 2008
Number of sources
M31N2001-11a
M31N2005-01c
erg cm-2 s-1
M31N2007-06b
Period 865.5s (Nova?) Osborne et al. 2001
7.3 ? 1036 erg/s
9Optical Novae
- Major class of SSSs in centre of M 31 optical
novae (Pietsch et al. 2005, 2007) - Outer regions not deep enough optical and no
X-ray monitoring for novae/SSSs ? only snapshots
(X-rays)? only random detections ? difficult to
determine general properties of disk nova
population
SSSsNovae
10Optical Novae (II)
M31N a. opt.det. Not vis. Distance Tbb (eV) LX (erg/s)
1994-09a 2591 d 3583 d 3.1 1.6?1036
1995-11c 1486 d --- 2.1 1.68?1037
1996-08b 1880 d --- 1.1 5.6 ?1036
1997-08b 1589 d 2514 d 2.3 0.7 ?1036
1997-10c 982 d 1167 d 1.9 ? 41 5.9 ?1037
1998-06a 1119 d 2235 d 1.1 1.7 ?1036
1999-10a 1751 d --- 1.6 2.12?1037
2000-07a 170 d --- 1.3 1.35 ?1037
2001-10f 84 d 1009 d 0.9 3.7?1037
2001-11a 53 d --- 0.5 Smirnova et al. 2006 Smirnova et al. 2006
2005-01b 535 d 1073 d 4.3 ? 45 1.0?1037
2005-01c 703 d --- 0.9 ? 40.23 1.2 ?1038
2005-09b 299 d 690 d 0.57
2007-06b ? See talk of M. Henze Pietsch et al. 2007 ? See talk of M. Henze Pietsch et al. 2007 ? See talk of M. Henze Pietsch et al. 2007 ? See talk of M. Henze Pietsch et al. 2007 ? See talk of M. Henze Pietsch et al. 2007
? 35
5.4 ?1038
11Comparing the XMM-Newton Deep Survey, ROSAT and
Chandra catalogues
12ROSAT PSPC Survey
- PSPC survey covering the entire galaxy twice ?
560 X-ray sources Supper et al. 1997, 2001 - Supersoft sources selected from Greiner 2000 and
Kahabka 1999 - Similar selection criterion (as used for
XMM-Newton) - Two hardness ratios (based on standard ROSAT
energy bands) - band separation energies at 0.5 keV, and 1
keV - ROSAT observations taken about gt 10 yr earlier
than XMM-Newton observations (? investigation of
long term variability)
13Chandra Observations
- Observation of selected fields, especially
central region Kong et al. 2002, Kaaret 2002, Di
Stefano et al. 2004, Williams et al. 2004, 2006, - Very soft sources Di Stefano et al. 2004
- Three energy bands S 0.1-1.1 keV M 1.1-2 keV
H 2-7 keV - Several criteria to select SSSs and QSSs
- Important difference
- Contamination of SSS class with
- Temporal distance to XMM-
Voss Gilfanov 2007
Only one band below 1 keV
foreground stars, SNRs and soft AGNs
Newton observationscentre and Field 2 lt 1
yrFields 13 gt 4yr
Image Di Stefano et al. 2004
14Method
Two step process
First step Were the XMM-Newton SSSs detected in
previous surveys?
Full ROSAT PSPC
XMM Newton SSS
Full Chandra
Second step How many ROSAT/Chandra SSSs are
detected with XMM-Newton?
ROSAT SSS
Full XMM Deep Survey
Chandra VSS
15XMM-Newton SSS to ROSAT PSPC Surveys
- 43 XMM-Newton SSS, 12 brighter than ROSAT
detection threshold (5.3?10-15 erg cm-2 s-1) - 2 also found as ROSAT SSSs
- 10 not detected with ROSAT 6 recent novae, 1
transient, 1 variable ? 2 must be
transient/highly variable - 31 XMM-Newton SSS with fluxes below ROSAT
detection threshold - 1 also found as ROSAT SSSs (factor 22-25
brighter in ROSAT observations) - 3 chance coincidences
- 27 remaining sources 7 recent novae, 1 transient
(Di Stefano et al. 2004)
16XMM-Newton SSS to Chandra Surveys
- 9 XMM-Newton SSSs have Chandra counterparts
- 6 are also classified as SSSs from Chandra
- 8 of the 9 sources are located in the centre of M
31 - 34 sources do not have Chandra counterparts
- 7 are in regions not covered with Chandra
- 10 are novae (4 after 2005, 6 no Chandra
detections (see Pietsch et al. 2005, 2007 and
M31N1999-10c, M31N2001-11a)) - 1 variable
17ROSAT SSSs to XMM-Newton Deep Survey
- 34 ROSAT SSS, 4 not in observed XMM-Newton field
- 14 correlations with XMM-Newton sources
-
- 16 ROSAT SSS without XMM-Newton counterparts 1
nova? Where are the novae?No systematic
search/monitoring campaign in the years before
1990 ? number of known optical novae very low
(see talk of W. Pietsch)
3 SSS confirmed with XMM-Newton SSS confirmed with XMM-Newton SSS confirmed with XMM-Newton
5 Fg Star cand 1 Fg Star
1 SNR 1 Galaxy
2 lthardgt 1 No class. (2 XMM)
most of these sources not highly variable (fvar lt
5)
18Chandra VSSs to XMM-Newton Deep Survey
- 20 Chandra SSSs
- 15 correlations with XMM-Newton sources
- 5 not detected with XMM-Newton (4 transients (Di
Stefano et al. 2004, 2 of them novae), 1 faint)
5 Confirmed SSSs 2 Fg Star cand.
3 Confirmed fg Stars 1 SNR cand.
2 Confirmed SNRs 2 XRB cnad.
19Chandra VSSs to XMM-Newton Deep Survey
- 23 Chandra QSSs
- 12 correlations with XMM-Newton sources
- 11 not detected with XMM-Newton (1 outside XMM
field, 5 transients (Di Stefano et al. 2004), 1
in crowded centre, 2 faint)
3 Confirmed fg Stars Confirmed fg Stars Confirmed fg Stars
3 Fg Star cand. 1 Fg Star
1 Bg Gal cand. 2 lthardgt
2 No class.
20What do we learn?
- 3 sources detected in all 3 missions ? visible
for more than a decade
- Two are located in the central field
- XMMM31 J004318.8412017 r3-8 SHL2001 235
foreground polar? (Williams et al. 2006) - XMMM31 J004252.5411540 r2-12 SHL2001 203
PFJ93 58 TF91 69 217s period
(Trudolyubov et al. 2008) - XMMM31 J003840.5401956 s2-26 SHL2001 27
r3-8
r2-12
ROSAT
ROSAT 22-25 ? brighterXMM June 2006 Jan.
2008 in 3 Chandra observations (2000-2001) only
once visible ? variable (Di Stefano et al. 2004)
s2-26
XMM-Newton
Chandra
21What do we learn? (II)
- Of 12 XMM-Newton sources with brightness above
ROSAT threshold, only 2 observed by ROSAT ?
underlines variability of the source class on
long time scales (83 variable, cf. Greiner et
al. 2004) - ROSAT as well as Chandra SSSs contain sources of
other classes
22What do we learn? (III)
- Two interesting sources
- XMMM31 J004307.1411810 r3-115 Chandra and
XMM-Newton observations between 2000-end 2001
SSSXMM-Newton observation Jan. 2002 hard
spectrum (Pietsch et al. 2005) - XMMM31 J004247.9411549 r1-25 Chandra
observations between 2000-end 2001
SSSXMM-Newton observation July 2004 hard
spectrumoptical counterpart within 1.2
(regular or semi-regular red variable Fliri et
al. 2006) - Nature unclear X-ray transient (BH primary) or
symbiotic
r3-115
r1-25
23Summary
- Deep XMM-Newton survey of M 31 ? 1951 X-ray
sources, 43 Supersoft sources - Optical novae are an important class of SSSs in M
31 (5 in addition to Pietsch et al. 2005, 2007)
- Correlation with ROSAT PSPC surveys and Chandra
catalogues - 3 persistent SSSs
- SSSs are a highly variable source class
- Many ROSAT and Chandra SSSs get other classes
from XMM-Newton observations - Two sources that show supersoft-hard transition
between Chandra and XMM-Newton observations
24Thank you for your attention
- The large program collaboration
- PI W.Pietsch (MPE)
- MPE V. Burwitz, M. Freyberg, J. Greiner, F.
Haberl, H. Stiele - And R. Barnard (The Open University), D.
Hatzidimitriou (University of Crete), M. Hernanz
(CSIC-IEEC), G. Israel (INAF), U. Kolb (The Open
University), A. Kong (National Tsing Hua
University), P. Plucinsky (Harvard-Smithsonian
Centre for Astrophysics), P. Reig (IESL), G. Sala
(UPC/IEEC), M. Sasaki (Harvard-Smithsonian Centre
for Astrophysics), L. Shaw Greening (The Open
University), L. Stella (INAF), B. Williams
(Pennsylvania State University)