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We present the first results of an XMM-Newton EPIC observation of the luminous X-ray source population in the supergiant spiral galaxy M101. We have studied the properties of the fourteen most luminous sources, all of which have intrinsic X-ray luminosities exceeding the Eddington limit for a 1.4 solar mass neutron star, with a subset in the ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) regime. Eleven sources show evidence of short-term variability, and most vary by a factor of ~2-4 over a baseline of 11-24 yrs, providing strong evidence that these sources are accreting X-ray binary (XRB) systems. The sources show a variety of spectral shapes, with no apparent spectral distinction between those above and below the ULX threshold. Nine are well-fit with either simple absorbed disc blackbody/powerlaw models. However for three of the four sources best-fit with powerlaw models, we cannot exclude the disc blackbody fits and therefore conclude that, coupled with their high luminosities, eight out of nine single-component sources are possibly high state XRBs. The nuclear source has the only unambiguous powerlaw spectrum (photon index~2.3), which may be evidence for a low-luminosity AGN. The remaining five sources require at least two-component spectral fits. We have compared the spectral shapes of nine sources covered by both this observation and an archival 100ks Chandra observation of M101; the majority show behaviour typical of Galactic XRBs i.e. softening with increasing luminosity. We find no definitive spectral signatures to indicate that these sources contain neutron star primaries, and conclude that they are likely to be stellar-mass black hole XRBs, with black hole masses of ~2-23 solar masses if accreting at the Eddington limit (abridged).
We present the global X-ray properties of the point source population in the grand-design spiral galaxy M101, as seen with XMM-Newton. 108 X-ray sources are detected within the D25 ellipse of M101, of which ~24 are estimated to be background sources.
We present the results obtained from the analysis of three XMM-Newton observations of M83. The aims of the paper are studying the X-ray source populations in M83 and calculating the X-ray luminosity functions of X-ray binaries for different regions o
Cal 87 was observed with XMM-Newton in April of 2003. The source shows a rich emission line spectrum, where lines can be identified if they are red-shifted by 700-1200 km/s. These lines seem to have been emitted in a wind from the system. The eclipse
During an X-ray survey of the Small Magellanic Cloud, carried out with the XMM-Newton satellite, we detected significant soft X-ray emission from the central star of the high-excitation planetary nebula SMP SMC 22. Its very soft spectrum is well fit
(abridged) We analyzed the archived XMM-Newton observation of the poorly studied low-mass X-ray binary XTE J1710-281 performed in 2004 that covered one orbital period of the system (3.8 hr). The source shows dips as well as eclipses, hence it is view