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The Andromeda galaxy (M31) hosts a central super-massive black hole (SMBH), known as M31$^ast$, which is remarkable for its mass ($sim$$10^8{rm~M_odot}$) and extreme radiative quiescence. Over the past decade, the Chandra X-ray observatory has pointed to the center of M31 $sim$100 times and accumulated a total exposure of $sim$900 ks. Based on these observations, we present an X-ray study of a highly variable source that we associate with M31$^ast$ based on positional coincidence. We find that M31$^ast$ remained in a quiescent state from late 1999 to 2005, exhibiting an average 0.5-8 keV luminosity $lesssim$$10^{36}{rm~ergs~s^{-1}}$, or only $sim$$10^{-10}$ of its Eddington luminosity. We report the discovery of an outburst that occurred on January 6, 2006, during which M31$^ast$ radiated at $sim$$4.3times10^{37}{rm~ergs~s^{-1}}$. After the outburst, M31$^ast$ entered a more active state that apparently lasts to the present, which is characterized by frequent flux variability around an average luminosity of $sim$$4.8times10^{36}{rm~ergs~s^{-1}}$. These flux variations are similar to the X-ray flares found in the SMBH of our Galaxy (Sgr A$^ast$), making M31$^ast$ the second SMBH known to exhibit recurrent flares. Future coordinated X-ray/radio observations will provide useful constraints on the physical origin of the flaring emission and help rule out a possible stellar origin of the X-ray source.
We have investigated the linear X-ray filament, G359.944-0.052, previously identified as a likely X-ray counterpart of a parsec-scale jet from the Galactic Center super-massive black hole (SMBH), Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), using a total of ~5.6 Ms ultr
Prominent K-shell emission lines of neutral iron (hereafter, FeI-K) and hard-continuum X-rays were found from molecular clouds (MCs) in the Sagittarius B (Sgr B) region with the two separate Suzaku observations in 2005 and 2009. The X-ray flux of FeI
Pulsar Timing Arrays are a prime tool to study unexplored astrophysical regimes with gravitational waves. Here we show that the detection of gravitational radiation from individually resolvable super-massive black hole binary systems can yield direct
We discuss the central role played by X-ray studies to reconstruct the past history of formation and evolution of supermassive Black Holes (BHs), and the role they played in shaping the properties of their host galaxies. We shortly review the progres
Aims: A strong, hard X-ray flare was discovered (IGR J12580+0134) by INTEGRAL in 2011, and is associated to NGC 4845, a Seyfert 2 galaxy never detected at high-energy previously. To understand what happened we observed this event in the X-ray band on