Optical Properties of the Ultraluminous X-Ray Source Holmberg IX X-1 and Its Stellar Environment

Grisé, F.; Kaaret, P.; Pakull, M. W.; Motch, C.
Bibliographical reference

The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 734, Issue 1, article id. 23 (2011).

Advertised on:
6
2011
Number of authors
4
IAC number of authors
0
Citations
47
Refereed citations
46
Description
Holmberg IX X-1 is an archetypal ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX). Here we study the properties of the optical counterpart and of its stellar environment using optical data from SUBARU/Faint Object Camera and Spectrograph, GEMINI/GMOS-N and Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/Advanced Camera for Surveys, as well as simultaneous Chandra X-ray data. The V ~ 22.6 spectroscopically identified optical counterpart is part of a loose cluster with an age <~ 20 Myr. Consequently, the mass upper limit on individual stars in the association is about 20 M sun. The counterpart is more luminous than the other stars of the association, suggesting a non-negligible optical contribution from the accretion disk. An observed UV excess also points to non-stellar light similar to X-ray active low-mass X-ray binaries. A broad He II λ4686 emission line identified in the optical spectrum of the ULX further suggests optical light from X-ray reprocessing in the accretion disk. Using stellar evolutionary tracks, we have constrained the mass of the counterpart to be >~ 10 M sun, even if the accretion disk contributes significantly to the optical luminosity. Comparison of the photometric properties of the counterpart with binary models show that the donor may be more massive, >~ 25 M sun, with the ULX system likely undergoing case AB mass transfer. Finally, the counterpart exhibits photometric variability of 0.14 mag between two HST observations separated by 50 days which could be due to ellipsoidal variations and/or disk reprocessing of variable X-ray emission.