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We present a summary of our ongoing efforts to study one of the brightest ultraluminous X-ray source, NGC 1313 X-2. Despite a large coverage in the X-rays, much of the information we have about the source and its environment comes from optical wavelenghts. Here, we report on the properties of the stellar environment, and the differences in the optical counterpart between our two observing epochs (2003--2004 and 2007--2008). We summarize our ongoing program designed to look for radial velocity variations in the optical spectra and for photometric variability.
It is thought that ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) are mainly powered by super-Eddington accreting neutron stars or black holes as shown by recent discovery of X-ray pulsations and relativistic winds. This work presents a follow up study of the sp
We present a theoretical study on the nature of the ultra-luminous X-ray source NGC 1313 X-2. We evolved a set of binaries with high mass donor stars orbiting a 20 M_Sun or a 50-100 M_Sun black hole. Using constraints from optical observations we res
We present the results of NuSTAR and XMM-Newton observations of the two ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULX) NGC 1313 X-1 and X-2. The combined spectral bandpass of the two satellites enables us to produce the first spectrum of X-1 between 0.3 and 30 ke
We analyzed the longest phase-connected photometric dataset available for NGC 1313 X-2, looking for the ~6 day modulation reported by Liu et al. (2009). The folded B band light curve shows a 6 day periodicity with a significance slightly larger than
Recent evidence - in particular the hard X-ray spectra obtained by NuSTAR, and the large amplitude hard X-ray variability observed when ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) show soft spectra - reveals that common ULX behaviour is inconsistent with know