- 1INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Cagliari, Cagliari, Selargius, Italy
- 2School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom
- 3INAF—IASF Palermo, Palermo, Italy
- 4Centre for Astrophysics Research, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, United Kingdom
- 5Cahill Center for Astrophysics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States
- 6Department of Physics, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, NC, United States
- 7Centre for Extragalactic Astronomy, Department of Physics, Durham University, Durham, United Kingdom
- 8Department of Physics, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece
- 9Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory, Columbia University, New York, NY, United States
- 10Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie, Centre National d’Études Spatiales, Université de Toulouse, CNES, Toulouse, France
- 11Department of Physics, University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong SAR, China
- 12X-ray Astrophysics Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, United States
- 13INAF—Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma, Rome, Italy
- 14Max-Planck-Institut für Extraterrestrische Physik, Garching, Germany
- 15Center for Computational Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan
- 16Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States
- 17INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera, Milano, Italy
Introduction: Ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) represent an extreme class of accreting compact objects: from the identification of some of the accretors as neutron stars to the detection of powerful winds travelling at 0.1–0.2 c, the increasing evidence points towards ULXs harbouring stellar-mass compact objects undergoing highly super-Eddington accretion. Measuring their intrinsic properties, such as the accretion rate onto the compact object, the outflow rate, the masses of accretor/companion-hence their progenitors, lifetimes, and future evolution-is challenging due to ULXs being mostly extragalactic and in crowded fields. Yet ULXs represent our best opportunity to understand super-Eddington accretion physics and the paths through binary evolution to eventual double compact object binaries and gravitational-wave sources.
Methods: Through a combination of end-to-end and single-source simulations, we investigate the ability of HEX-P to study ULXs in the context of their host galaxies and compare it to XMM-Newton and NuSTAR, the current instruments with the most similar capabilities.
Results: HEX-P’s higher sensitivity, which is driven by its narrow point-spread function and low background, allows it to detect pulsations and broad spectral features from ULXs better than XMM-Newton and NuSTAR.
Discussion: We describe the value of HEX-P in understanding ULXs and their associated key physics, through a combination of broadband sensitivity, timing resolution, and angular resolution, which make the mission ideal for pulsation detection and low-background, broadband spectral studies.
1 Introduction
Ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs, see Kaaret et al., 2017; Fabrika et al., 2021; King et al., 2023; Pinto and Walton, 2023 for recent reviews) are off-nuclear X-ray sources whose apparent luminosities exceed the Eddington limit for a stellar-mass black hole (e.g.,
ULXs commonly have X-ray spectra consisting of two thermal components; the lower-energy component has a characteristic temperature of
The detection of some Galactic super-Eddington NSs provide a possible link between high-luminosity X-ray binaries (XRBs) and ULXs (Wilson-Hodge et al., 2018, e.g., Swift J0243+6124); in general, studying the highest-luminosity end of Galactic XRBs in the Milky Way Galaxy and external galaxies might provide clues on the onset of the ULX regime [see Fabbiano (2006) for a review, and Connors et al. (2023), in this volume, for HEX-P’s contribution to studies of this Galactic population].
Except for the few cases where pulsations have been observed, implying a neutron star (NS) accretor, determining the nature of the compact object in ULXs remains a major challenge for current observatories and a key open question for the vast majority of sources. One way to address this issue is through population synthesis studies, which suggest that NS-ULXs may dominate the ULX population (King et al., 2017; Middleton and King, 2017; Wiktorowicz et al., 2019; Khan et al., 2021). PULXs can reach luminosities above 1041 erg s−1 (e.g., NGC 5907 X-1, Israel et al., 2017), and given the similarity of PULX spectra to much of the ULX population, NSs might indeed power the majority of ULXs (Pintore et al., 2017; Walton et al., 2018b). In addition, a very small number of ULXs have shown evidence for cyclotron resonance scattering features (CRSFs) in their spectra1 (e.g., Walton et al., 2018a; Brightman et al., 2018), providing another route to identifying the presence of a NS, as well as a direct estimate of the magnetic field strength (likely indicating a weaker dipole but stronger multipolar field) close to the NS surface (Middleton et al., 2019a; Kong et al., 2022).
The mechanism for the very high luminosities of ULXs is still debated. It is likely that the emission is partially collimated by an optically thick, radiatively driven outflow (King et al., 2001) launched from the large scale-height disk expected at very high mass-transfer rates (Shakura and Sunyaev, 1973). Indeed, many ULXs show evidence of high-velocity winds and outflows likely inflating the
Most ULXs are known to have other bright X-ray sources within 1′, in particular those located outside the Local Group (see Section 3.1.2). A clear detection and isolation of sources is therefore not possible given the low resolution power of the high energy detectors in use, impeding a profound and detailed study of the whole population of ULXs. The understanding of ULXs could reach considerable advancement by the combination, in one instrument, of high angular resolution, high time resolution and sensitivity in the hard X-rays.
The High-Energy X-ray Probe (HEX-P; Madsen et al., 2023) is a probe-class mission concept that offers sensitive broad-band X-ray coverage (0.2–80 keV) with an exceptional combination of spectral, timing and angular resolution capabilities. It features two high-energy telescopes (HETs) that focus hard X-rays, and one low-energy telescope (LET) that focuses lower energy X-rays.
The LET consists of a segmented mirror assembly, coated with iridium on monocrystalline silicon that achieves a half power diameter (HPD) of 3.5″, and a low-energy DEPFET detector, of the same type as the Wide Field Imager (WFI; Meidinger et al., 2020) onboard Athena (Nandra et al., 2013). It has 512 × 512 pixels that cover a field of view of 11.3′ × 11.3′, an effective passband of 0.2–25 keV, and a full frame readout time of 2 ms, which can be operated in a 128 and 64 channel window mode for higher count-rates, to mitigate pile-up and allow for faster readout. Pile-up effects remain below an acceptable limit of
The HET consists of two co-aligned telescopes and detector modules. The optics are made of Ni-electroformed full shell, mirror substrates, leveraging the heritage of XMM-Newton (Jansen et al., 2001), and coated with Pt/C and W/Si multilayers for an effective passband of 2–80 keV. The high-energy detectors are of the same type flown on NuSTAR (Harrison et al., 2013), consisting of 16 CZT sensors per focal plane, tiled 4 × 4, for a total of 128 × 128 pixels spanning a field of view of 13.4′ × 13.4′. This improvement in angular resolution allows for a much more sensitive instrument configuration compared to NuSTAR.
The broad HEX-P X-ray passband and superior sensitivity compared with existing facilities provides a powerful and important opportunity to study ULXs across a wide range of energies, luminosities, and timescales.
2 Challenges and open questions
A number of major questions in the field of ULXs and super-Eddington accretion remain unanswered, preventing us from achieving a comprehensive understanding of their phenomenology and detailed accretion physics. We briefly describe them here.
2.1 Where does the transferred mass go?
Understanding the fraction of matter being expelled in winds versus the fraction accreted is key to estimate the possible evolutionary paths of massive binary systems–for instance, the formation of double compact object binaries and systems that create large ionising flux at high redshifts (Fragos et al., 2013)—and for understanding potential supermassive black hole (SMBH) growth rates in the early universe. A possible means for measuring the current mass loss rate is via the absorption lines, which are indicators of quasi-relativistic winds [see Pinto et al. (2016)], requiring observations at
Winds in XRBs are commonly identified via absorption lines in the Fe K band from hot plasmas (typically Fe XXV-XXVI), and in the soft band from a forest of H- and He-like ions of several elements from C to Fe [for a review see Neilsen and Degenaar (2023)]. Initial searches for Fe XXV-XXVI in ULXs did not result in detections [see, e.g., Walton et al. (2013)], most likely due to their soft spectra or high ionisation state of the gas [for a review on ULX winds see Pinto and Walton (2023)]. Evidence of atomic lines in low-resolution ULX X-ray spectra were found in the form of residuals around 1 keV with respect to the continuum model through high-count-rate XMM-Newton EPIC spectra (Stobbart et al., 2006; Middleton et al., 2014; 2015b). Later on, high-spatial-resolution instruments onboard Chandra showed that the residuals were associated with the ULX itself rather than the interstellar medium in the host galaxy (Sutton et al., 2015), which was supported by the anticorrelation between their strength and the ULX X-ray spectral hardness (Middleton et al., 2015b). The first unambiguous proof of winds was obtained through long observations (300–500 ks) with the high-spectral-resolution reflection grating spectrometer (RGS) onboard XMM-Newton. In particular, Pinto et al. (2016) discovered a forest of emission lines (at rest-frame laboratory wavelengths) and absorption lines (mainly O VII-VIII and Ne IX-X), blueshifted by
Features indicating a wind have been found in the majority of ULX RGS spectra with ≳ 1, 000 net counts (Pinto et al., 2017; Kosec et al., 2018; Pinto et al., 2021), as well as in the Chandra gratings observation of the transient Galactic super-Eddington NS, Swift J0243.6+6124 (van den Eijnden et al., 2019). The luminosity of the plasma producing the emission lines varies slightly over time and is very large (LX ∼ 1038 erg s−1; Pinto et al., 2020a), orders of magnitude higher than in Eddington-limited Galactic XRBs (Psaradaki et al., 2018). Absorption lines at 8.6–8.8 keV from the hotter Fe K component of the wind were finally found (albeit at lower significance) in a few ULXs with hard spectra (Walton et al., 2016b; Brightman et al., 2022). The emission and absorption lines in the soft band (0.3–2 keV) have equivalent widths similar to those of Galactic XRBs [EW ∼ 5–10 eV, see Kosec et al. (2021)]. The Fe K absorption features, albeit rarer, appear deeper (EW ∼ 50–200 eV) and similar to the most extreme wind phases observed in Galactic XRBs (which have velocities of
The very low detection rate of Fe K lines arises as a combination of low effective area in current instruments, high background, and low ionic fractions. The latter is a consequence of the soft radiation field of ULXs (e.g., Pinto and Walton, 2023). However, in ULXs likely seen at low inclinations [e.g., the hard ultraluminous, or HUL, systems of Sutton et al. (2013) with spectral slopes Γ < 2], the continuum is strong, likely overwhelming the lines in the soft band (e.g., Middleton et al., 2015b). The Fe K features might then be detected, as the irradiating continuum is hard, as long as the gas is not overionised in the wind cone and the instrumental background is sufficiently low at 7–9 keV.
Although absorption lines have proven elusive in HUL sources (such as Holmberg IX X-1 and most pulsating ULXs), should such features be detected, we could start to understand a) the 3D structure of the wind, and b) the actual mass outflow rate (and true kinetic power). The latter has important cosmological consequences for the net growth rate of SMBHs (e.g., Volonteri and Rees, 2005; Volonteri et al., 2015) and the overall role which ULXs play in their host galaxies, particularly at the peak of star formation (e.g., Prestwich et al., 2015). HEX-P will dramatically improve our ability to search for the Fe K wind component in ULXs thanks to its broader energy band (needed for modelling the continuum, which is crucial to search for shallow spectral features, see Figure 8), improved sensitivity compared to XMM-Newton and NuSTAR (for maximizing total source counts), and its narrower PSF (since ULXs tend to reside in crowded regions).
2.2 What is the content of the ULX population?
One of the open questions regarding the nature of ULXs is the prevalence of NS accretors and the strength of their magnetic fields. The detection of fast (≳ 1 Hz) pulsations unequivocally identifies a ULX as a NS, and pulsar timing can be used to indirectly estimate the magnetic field (e.g., Ghosh and Lamb, 1979; Wang, 1996). The detection of cyclotron lines in X-ray spectra allows us to tackle these two problems simultaneously, as it enables us to identify the presence of a NS where pulsations may be undetectable or absent (Brightman et al., 2018), while simultaneously offering an indication of the magnetic field strength (Walton et al., 2018a; Middleton et al., 2019a). To date, only two potential CRSFs have been reported in extragalactic ULXs (Walton et al., 2018a; Brightman et al., 2018), and one Galactic super-Eddington source, Swift J0243+6124 (Kong et al., 2022). The broadband coverage of HEX-P–and its higher sensitivity above 10 keV (where these lines are typically detected in NS XRBs; Staubert et al., 2019)—will allow us to increase the population of identified NS-ULXs by detecting CRSFs (see Section 3.3.3).
At the moment, due to the limited amount of high quality data, the sample of well-studied ULXs is very small (a few tens, compared to the thousands known; Walton et al., 2022; Tranin et al., 2023), restricting our ability to perform deep searches for pulsations and CRSFs, and hence preventing us from assessing the fraction of NSs in the ULX population. Given the energy dependence of the pulsing component (e.g., Brightman et al., 2016) and the potential for the CRSF to be located at a wide range of energies (depending on the magnetic field strength), broad-band observations, especially at high energies, are crucial.
A similar energy dependence also characterizes other forms of variability in addition to pulsations, such as quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs), which can in principle be used to classify accreting objects (Lewin et al., 1988; Belloni and Hasinger, 1990; van der Klis, 2005). ULXs are known to show QPOs (Atapin et al., 2019), some of which match the phenomenology observed in other accreting systems, e.g., QPOs that have been detected over a broad-band [like M82 X-1’s 50–300 mHz QPO, see, e.g., El Byad (2021)] are more significant at higher energies (≳ 10 keV). The broadband spectro-temporal study of a rich sample of ULXs will help single out possible candidate black hole ULXs (e.g., Wolter et al., 2018). In particular, it will be crucial for studying the brightest ULXs, also referred to as hyperluminous X-ray sources (HLXs; Farrell et al., 2009; MacKenzie et al., 2023, still considered among the best candidates to host intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) although are rare and mostly found in very distant galaxies.
2.3 What drives the changes in ULX brightness/spectral shape?
ULXs have been observed to change dramatically in brightness on timescales of days, weeks, and months (e.g., Walton et al., 2016a; Gúrpide et al., 2021a; b). Possible causes of this variability include precession of the disk and wind (e.g., Pasham and Strohmayer, 2013; Middleton et al., 2015b; Luangtip et al., 2016; Amato et al., 2023) driven by a variety of processes [see the discussion in Middleton et al. (2018), (2019b)], changes in accretion rate [for instance by the launching of a thermal wind at large radius (Middleton et al., 2022), or by modulating the mass transfer rate in a radiatively driven stellar wind], or the onset of a propeller state associated with a NS close to spin equilibrium. The latter has been extensively searched for (Earnshaw et al., 2018; Song et al., 2020), with the strongest evidence seen in the changing spin period of NGC 5907 ULX-1 (Fürst et al., 2023). With a well considered monitoring strategy, it should also be possible to identify propeller states accompanying smaller changes in luminosity by isolating changes in the spectrum at high energies [see Middleton et al. (2023)], provided that a broad energy bandpass is available. Determining the mechanism behind the long timescale changes in ULXs then requires several key ingredients: a) high energy coverage and sensitivity to locate and track pulsations, b) low energy coverage and sensitivity to explore how the wind responds to changes in the broad band spectrum (e.g., Middleton et al., 2015b; Pinto et al., 2020b), and c) broad simultaneous coverage at high and low energies in order to locate the hard component switching off (whilst the soft emission remains stable), which is an indicator of a likely propeller transition, and more generally to detect spectral transitions (Amato et al., 2023).
3 Simulations
To demonstrate the improved capabilities of HEX-P compared to the current primary instruments for ULX studies, XMM-Newton and NuSTAR, we performed a detailed HEX-P simulation of NGC 253, a Galaxy with a large population of bright XRBs and ULXs, using the SImulation of X-ray TElescopes (SIXTE) software package (Dauser et al., 2019), with the procedure described in Section 3.1.1. This simulation provides precise estimates of the source and sky count rates, and the instrumental background, to set up reliable estimates for the detection and temporal and spectral characterization of sources in crowded fields. These estimates were refined through follow-up simulations, using the count rates and background from the SIXTE simulations as inputs.
All the simulations presented in this paper were produced with a set of response files that represent the observatory performance based on current best estimates as of Spring 2023 (see Madsen et al., 2023). The effective area is derived from a ray-trace of the mirror design including obscuration by all known structures. The detector responses are based on simulations performed by the respective hardware groups, with an optical blocking filter for the LET and a Be window and thermal insulation for the HET. The LET background was derived from a GEANT4 simulation (Eraerds et al., 2021) of the WFI instrument, and the HET background was derived from a GEANT4 simulation of the NuSTAR instrument; both simulations assume an L1 orbit for HEX-P. XMM-Newton and NuSTAR simulations were also performed for comparison, using the official set of response files distributed with SIXTE2.
3.1 End-to-end simulations of an NGC 253-like galaxy
The Chandra Source Catalogue v.2.0 (Evans et al., 2010; 2020) contains 1583 ULXs [following the criteria from Walton et al. (2022)]. Among these ULXs, 14% have other X-ray sources within 5″, 45% within 20″, and 64% within 40′′. The vast majority of the ULXs appear close to the nuclear region of their host galaxy, particularly for the ULXs residing in more distant galaxies. In these conditions, improvements in the angular resolution, whilst not degrading the effective area, timing capabilities, and hard X-ray response, are key for studying ULXs.
ULXs are mostly extragalactic objects; some galaxies, such as M51 (7.2 Mpc; Terashima and Wilson, 2004), NGC 253 (3.5 Mpc; Wik et al., 2014), and the Cartwheel Galaxy (150 Mpc; Wolter et al., 2018), are known to contain a relatively large number of bright accreting sources and ULXs, and so far, only Chandra is able to fully resolve their positions. It is possible that a population of elusive, highly absorbed ULXs (e.g., Luangtip et al., 2015; West et al., 2023), has still escaped detection (or identification as ULXs), awaiting high-energy response (and an ability to spatially separate them).
With its high sensitivity and angular resolution, HEX-P will be able to detect and characterize the spectra of many new ULXs. Simulations indicate that the effective area and background of HEX-P will allow us to not only identify ULXs from their characteristic spectra, but also detect important spectral features such as emission and absorption lines associated with strong winds, or cyclotron resonance features that allow for an estimate of NS magnetic fields (see Figure 8). Moreover, these capabilities are key for detecting pulsations from pulsars in crowded environments. We demonstrate this in the Sections below.
3.1.1 SIXTE setup
For complete, end-to-end simulations, we used the SIXTE software package (Dauser et al., 2019), a Monte Carlo simulation toolkit for X-ray astronomical instrumentation. This software is able to take into account very accurately the source properties, including simulating complicated fields-of-view with diffuse emission, and characteristics of the optics and detection system of the mission. The SIXTE team worked with the leads of the HEX-P mission to provide up-to-date instrument specification files for HEX-P. The SIXTE website also contains hardware specifications for a number of existing and future missions that allow an easy comparison between them.
To run a simulation with SIXTE, we first generate a source input (SIMPUT-format) file containing: 1) an image of the diffuse emission; 2) its spectral shape defined as a Xspec-format xcm file; and 3) a list of point sources, having different spectral shapes and timing properties, including pulsations and/or aperiodic variability. Through the script run_sixt, we then generate realistic simulations for HEX-P, NuSTAR, and XMM-Newton.
3.1.2 Galaxy and source parameters
We set up a SIMPUT file using a map of the diffuse emission of NGC 253, and 70 point sources3.
The map of diffuse emission was obtained by removing all point sources from a deep Chandra map of the field. We assigned to it a thermal plasma spectrum [based on Wik et al. (2014); see the details in Lehmer et al. (2023), in this volume]. The total 0.5–7 keV flux of the diffuse emission was 9.6 ⋅ 10–12 erg s−1 cm−2. The 70 point sources selected were the 70 brightest sources from the Chandra catalogue. We only conserved the position and flux between 0.5 and 8 keV, but otherwise we changed the spectral and temporal properties of each source, as follows:
• each source had a ULX-like cutoff-powerlaw spectrum, with random parameters uniformly distributed in intervals deemed plausible by comparison with the spectral characteristics of known ULXs (e.g., Pintore et al., 2017): cutoff Ecut between 1 and 10 keV, and Γ between −2 and 0;
• pulsations with a pulsed fraction between 20% and 100% [NGC 300 ULX has ∼80% pulsed fraction over the full band, see e.g., Carpano et al. (2018), Vasilopoulos et al. (2019)], a pulse period between 1 ms and 100 s, and a pulse profile described by a Von Mises distribution with κ between 1 and 5.
We then ran full SIXTE simulations for HEX-P, NuSTAR, and XMM-Newton to produce images such as those shown in Figure 1. To analyze the simulations and estimate count rates from the sources and various components of the background, we used circular source regions centered at the source position with a radius corresponding to half of the half-power diameter of the point spread function used by SIXTE for the simulation.
FIGURE 1. 1-Ms Simulation of a NGC 253-like starburst galaxy showing the various components including diffuse hot gas and XRBs. Here we compare the performance of XMM-Newton and NuSTAR [compare to Pietsch et al. (2001), Wik et al. (2014)] with the instruments onboard HEX-P, using the procedure described in Section 3.1.2. HEX-P is able to resolve most of the bright X-ray sources in nearby galaxies, enabling a detailed study of both the source and diffuse emission. In particular, HEX-P is able to resolve and study in detail all ULXs, including the ones with known notable features (pulsations, lines, eclipses; see text), with better sensitivity and equivalent-or-better energy and timing resolution compared to XMM-Newton and NuSTAR.
For each source region, we used the internal description of data in SIXTE to estimate how many photons came from the source n (SRC_ID = n), how many from the instrumental background (SRC_ID == −1) and how many from the sky background [(SRC_ID != −1)&(SRC_ID != n)].
3.2 Pulsar simulations
Assuming that one has averaged enough periodograms to yield normally-distributed powers, Lewin et al. (1988) estimates the significance of the detection of a broad feature against a Poisson background (e.g., a high frequency QPO) in a periodogram as
where I is the total count rate (sky, instrument, source), r the rms fractional variability of the QPO over the total flux, Tobs the observing time, and Δν the width of the feature. This means that the observing time necessary to detect a QPO scales with the inverse fourth power of the rms.
Pulsar searches are usually performed with single periodograms, or proxies of them such as the
FIGURE 2. Comparison of the single-trial detection significance (in number of sigma) of a quasi-sinusoidal pulsed profile with a
3.2.1 Simulation setup
To simulate time-variable fluxes, we use inverse transform sampling. By appropriate normalization, a (positive definite) time series can be considered a probability density function. We first calculate its cumulative distribution function (CDF) by simple integration. Then, we generate random values of the CDF by extracting a series of values uniformly distributed between 0 and 1. We then invert this CDF by calculating (through any interpolation algorithm) the time values corresponding to that value of the CDF. This can be applied to a variable aperiodic light curve, for example, generated through the Timmer and Koenig (1995) method, or to the phases of a pulsar given its pulse profile. If we start from pulsar phases, further corrections to these phases can be made to accommodate spin derivatives, with the usual Taylor series expansion
3.2.2 A note on frame time
The frame time of CCD-like detectors reduces the sensitivity to pulsations with periods below 10–50 frame times depending on the profile shape (because of the spread of each frame over multiple phases of the pulsations). Hence, we can expect that the 73 ms frame time in full window of the EPIC-pn camera onboard XMM-Newton will greatly reduce sensitivity to sinusoidal pulsations with periods ≲ 500 ms, and sharp pulsations (e.g., some rotation-powered pulsars) with even much longer periods. In Figure 3, we generated ∼100,000 photons with phases following a Von Mises distribution of concentration (κ = 10), transformed the phases into arrival times by adding an integer pulse number and multiplying by the period, and applied a fixed frame time to the event times. Then, we folded the profiles using the standard procedure of adding a random number uniformly distributed around ±Δt/2 to avoid artifacts4. The profiles are clearly distorted, losing sharpness and height as the pulse period approaches the sampling period, until the pulsation is not detectable anymore.
FIGURE 3. Distortion of a pulse profile when the pulse period p is comparable to the frame time Δt. This is relevant for CCD-based detectors like XMM-Newton’s cameras (5.7 ms frame time in small window mode) or HEX-P/LET (2 ms frame time).
XMM-Newton has special data acquisition modes that reduce the frame time while sacrificing field-of-view. For example, the “small window” mode reaches a
3.2.3 Pulsar searches
We carried out two different procedures to search for (and characterize) pulsations in the simulated data described in Section 3.1, one blind search (to evaluate possible confusion of different unresolved candidates) and one directed at known pulsations (using the input periods, and evaluating the increase of detection significance with observing time).
For blind pulsation searches, we selected events from all the known source positions, using extraction regions equal to the HPD of each instrument. We then ran a standard Fourier search with a periodogram, to obtain a list of candidate frequencies (Lovelace and Sutton, 1969). Depending on the source position and the instrument used, there was significant contamination between the sources; this made frequency candidates from nearby sources appear in the search of others. This of course does not represent a problem. Around each pulsar candidate, we ran zoomed searches using the quasi-fast folding algorithm (Bachetti et al., 2020) as implemented in HENDRICS (Bachetti, 2018). This method allows a fast exploration of the frequency-frequency derivative plane around pulse candidates. As a metric for pulse detection we used the H test (de Jager et al., 1989) modified for binned profiles (Bachetti et al., 2021). We are mostly interested in the comparison between the instruments, and all parameters affecting the statistics are assumed the same for each5 (principally the observing time, which increases the frequency resolution of the FFT and hence the number of trials). We selected a H test statistic of 50 in any instrument as criterion to declare a rough detection. This resulted in
FIGURE 4. Results of a blind search of pulsations described in Section 3.2.3. Lines connect candidates for the same pulsar in different instruments. Some patterns appear: 1) XMM-Newton/EPIC-pn and HEX-P/LET have similar performance at low frequencies (the balance depends on pn’s slightly larger effective area and LET’s lower contamination), while HET is always better than NuSTAR; 2) EPIC-pn loses sensitivity above
To measure the expected detection significance of pulsars injected in the SIXTE simulation, we first evaluated the H-test at the injected frequency and the integrated pulse profile over the full simulation, and found the correct number of harmonics M to describe the pulsed profile. We then estimated the variation in the
1. We created a grid of exposure times (E) and distances (D) for the source. For each value of E and D, we rescaled all sky counts (background and source) with a E/D2 law, while the instrumental background was rescaled by exposure alone.
2. For each of the rescaled count estimates, we constructed a model pulse profile, as follows: 1) the theoretical pulse profile, including its intrinsic pulsed fraction, was normalized to an integrated value of 1 and multiplied by the number of source counts; 2) we added a background with the expected counts per bin from the sky and the instrument.
3. Finally, we created 100 realizations of the pulse profile by simulating Poisson-distributed random numbers for each bin of the pulse profile, and we calculated the
Figure 5 shows the detectability of two simulated bright pulsars (not even at a ULX level of brightness), near the nucleus of a galaxy modeled on NGC 253, with different instruments; these provide good examples of what happens when one looks for pulsations from sources in a crowded field and were selected to have a softer and harder spectrum respectively. The detectability of specific pulsars depends on the spectral shape, the fraction of pulsed flux, and the sky and instrumental background. Therefore, the same intrinsic pulsed flux ratio (PFR)6 can result in very different total PFR (and hence, detectability) in different instruments, depending on sensitivity and angular resolution. In these two cases (and the same consideration is supported by the blind search as well, Figure 4), one can see why the instruments onboard HEX-P perform equivalently or better than current focussing instruments like XMM-Newton and NuSTAR, especially if the source is located in crowded fields or even in peripheral regions of the host galaxy. The angular resolution of HEX-P allows the emission from a large number of contaminating sources to be filtered out, improving the PFR and the pulsation sensitivity, even where the effective area is slightly lower (e.g., XMM-Newton/EPIC-pn compared to LET).
FIGURE 5. The maps on the left show a 1-Msec LET simulation of the central region of NGC 253 using the same setup as Figure 1. Each map is centered on one example source in this region, and the two insets show the spectrum and the pulse profile of the source. Circles indicate the HPD of each instrument. The two sources are only resolved by the LET. The shaded regions on the right of each map show (top) the limiting distance at which we can detect the pulsation (at 5 σ) at the given PFR with different exposures, and (bottom) the limiting intrinsic PFR detectable at the distance of NGC 253 (3.5 Mpc, marked in the top plot as a blue dashed line). Color coding for all line plots indicates different instruments (the band pass in the first inset). NuSTAR and HEX-P/HET include the flux from two modules. Percentages in the legend indicate the source to background (all components) flux ratio in the region.
3.3 Spectral simulations
As discussed in Section 1, the X-ray spectral continuum of ULXs can be complex, characterized by up to three main components: a low-temperature (
The study of the relationship between the luminosities and temperatures of the thermal components measured in different epochs may be useful in order to obtain valuable information on the evolution and structure of the inner accretion disk. The luminosity-temperature (L − T) trends often disagree with the theoretical predictions of sub-Eddington thin discs (L ∝ T4) and even show negative slopes consistent with the photosphere of a super-Eddington disk/wind (e.g., Robba et al., 2021). In this regard, HEX-P will provide an important improvement with respect to current missions thanks to its high effective area and broad energy coverage. In Walton et al. (2020) (in prep.), for instance, simulations of Holmberg IX X-1 have been performed showcasing how HEX-P will enable accurate estimates of the L − T trends. In particular, it will be possible to distinguish the L − T tracks observed at high and low source fluxes [also seen in NGC 1313 X-1 (Walton et al., 2020)], which can indicate dramatic changes in the inner accretion flow.
Once a satisfactory description of the continuum is achieved, spectral residuals can be located [almost ubiquitously: Middleton et al. (2015b)] and, eventually, searches for narrow lines can be performed. This is typically performed through scans that involve a moving Gaussian through a grid of centroid energies (e.g., Pinto et al., 2016). Monte Carlo simulations must be used in order to probe the statistical significance of any putative lines (e.g., Kosec et al., 2021). More recently, the exploration of a large parameter space has been employed through grids of plasma models, which account for multiple emission or absorption lines simultaneously. This boosted the detectability of weak lines such as those from ultrafast outflows (e.g., Kosec et al., 2018; Pinto et al., 2021). The emission lines are primarily produced by Ne K and Fe L ions around 1 keV and the absorption lines from blueshifted O VIII and Ne K/Fe L around 0.8 and 1.2 keV, respectively. Evidence of Fe K around 8–9 keV has also been found, showing the hottest, fastest and most powerful wind component (e.g., Walton et al., 2016b; Brightman et al., 2022). The emission and absorption lines can be well described with models of plasma in photoionization equilibrium, which is expected in the case of winds irradiated by the ULX continuum. Most work in this regard has made use of the Spex code (Kaastra et al., 1996), in particular through the pion component, although some work also made use of Xstar (Kallman and Bautista, 2001; Mendoza et al., 2021) coupled with Xspec (Arnaud, 1996). In the latter case, photoionization model grids are computed with Xstar and then loaded into Xspec, whilst in the former, Spex instantaneously fits the continuum, calculates the ionization balance and the model, and fits it to both lines and continuum. An example of HEX-P’s performance with regards to continuum modelling and line detection is shown in Section 3.3.2.
3.3.1 Simulation setup
A typical workflow for X-ray spectral simulations involves: 1) defining a theoretical model; 2) defining a count rate
In our case, the last step in the above list is executed with Xspec’s fakeit command, using the most recent response files available for each mission (see Sections 3.3.2, 3.3.3), following the procedure from the Xspec manual8 or the equivalent procedure for PyXspec9. In order to simulate emission or absorption lines from plasmas in different types of equilibria (collisional or photoionisation) we also used the Spex code (Kaastra et al., 1996), which provides up-to-date atomic data, plasma models and a fitting package10.
3.3.2 Wind features
In order to demonstrate the power of HEX-P in studying winds from ULXs by, e.g., achieving a highly significant
FIGURE 6. 500ks HEX-P simulation of ULX NGC 1313 X-1 adopting the best-fit multiphase wind model of photoionised emitting and absorbing plasma (Pinto et al., 2020b). The middle panel shows the residuals assuming a continuum-only model (double blackbody plus cutoff powerlaw). The bottom panel shows the residuals to the full wind model. The rest-frame energies of the dominant transitions are labelled. Each component producing emission/absorption lines is detected at ≳5σ.
3.3.3 Cyclotron lines
Three (potential) CRSF features have been discussed for ULXs/related sources in the literature: an unusually low-energy ∼4.5 keV feature in M51 ULX-8 that could be a proton CRSF [seen by Chandra; (Brightman et al., 2018)], an extremely high-energy feature at ∼150 keV in the Galactic, Swift J0243+6124 [seen by HXMT; (Kong et al., 2022)], and a potential CRSF at ∼13 keV in the ULX pulsar NGC300 ULX1 [seen in a coordinated XMM-Newton + NuSTAR observation; (Walton et al., 2018a)]. However, the detection of the latter is noted to be somewhat tentative, as the data can also be explained by a more complex continuum model with no CRSF, an issue also discussed by Koliopanos et al. (2019) who argued the more complex continuum model may actually be preferred by the data. Part of the uncertainty is the poorly understood continuum and the limited coverage above ∼30 keV offered by NuSTAR, which makes it an excellent case-study for HEX-P.
In order to estimate the exposure time needed to unambiguously detect the putative line in NGC 300 ULX-1, we have simulated spectral models with and without the feature, using the models reported by Koliopanos et al. (2019) (see their Table 1 where they use a combination of two multi-color disk blackbodies and a powerlaw for the high energy emission, referred to as their MCAE model). We focus our simulations on the MCAE model with and without the line, as this gave the highest (Bayesian) evidence among a set of competing models (see their Table 2), but below we also present an alternative case.
We estimated the CRSF detection significance α, using the method from Protassov et al. (2002). To this end, we simulated a single HEX-P spectrum (both LET and HET) using the MCAE model with a CRSF line [as reported in Koliopanos et al. (2019)] for exposure times of 50, 100, 150 and 200 ks. We fitted this spectrum with the null hypothesis model of the MCAE model without a line and then with the MCAE model with the CRSF, recording the single value of
The results of our simulations are shown in Figure 7. We see that for a 50 ks exposure, including the line represents a
FIGURE 7. HEX-P detection levels and constraints on the putative NGC 300 ULX-1 CRSF. (Left) Line detection significance (top) and Δχ2 fit-improvement (bottom) as a function of exposure time. The error bars represent the spread over 10 realizations (see text for details). The Δχ2 fit-improvement obtained by Koliopanos et al. (2019) using a combined XMM-Newton and (∼140 ks for EPIC-pn) NuSTAR (∼180 ks) observation is shown as a dashed line for comparison. (Right) Constraints on the NGC 300 ULX-1 CRSF centroid energy (top) width (middle) and depth (bottom) as a function of exposure time for HEX-P (orange) and XMM-Newton + NuSTAR (blue, values have been shifted slightly horizontally for clarity). The mean best-fit value and mean (90% level) uncertainty are shown after averaging over 25 spectra per exposure time. The stars indicate the constraints obtained by Koliopanos et al. (2019) for comparison.
FIGURE 8. (Top) CRSF line in NGC 300 ULX-1 as observed by HEX-P in a 200 ks observation. (Bottom) CRSF line in M51 ULX-8 as observed by HEX-P in a 100 ks observation.
We also obtain simulated constraints on the line energy, width and depth, and compare these to those reported by Koliopanos et al. (2019) in Figure 7. We also simulated XMM-Newton-NuSTAR observations including all EPIC and both FMPA/B cameras, using responses from a similar epoch to the NGC 300 ULX-1 observations. We note that our latter simulations ignore calibration inaccuracies between XMM-Newton and NuSTAR detectors, which will only degrade the results presented here, particularly as compared to HEX-P. We can see from Figure 7 that HEX-P will allow us to obtain tighter constraints on the line properties compared to dedicated XMM-Newton + NuSTAR observations (about a factor two or even more). As stated above, one of the main uncertainties in the identification of the CRSF in NGC 300 ULX-1 was the nature of the underlying continuum. Walton et al. (2018a) proposed to tackle the problem by performing pulse-phase resolved spectroscopy. In particular, Walton et al. (2018a) isolated the pulsed spectrum by extracting data from the brightest and faintest quarter-phases of the pulse cycle of NGC 300 ULX-1 (and obtained the difference spectrum, i.e., “pulse-on”—“pulse-off”). By doing so, the uncertainty on the continuum is reduced as the ‘constant’ or non-pulsing component is eliminated. We thus performed additional simulations to examine the ability of HEX-P to distinguish between the two different continuum models presented by Walton et al. (2018a).
We simulated separate (LET and HET) spectra for the high (pulse on) and low (pulse off) phases of the pulse cycle of NGC 300 ULX-1 (each spanning 0.25 in phase) using the models of Walton et al. (2018a), i.e., a combination of two non-pulsing blackbodies and a high-energy gabs⊗cutoffpl ascribed to the accretion column. We subtracted the two and then fitted the pulsed component with the two competing models presented by Walton et al. (2018a) (a model containing the CRSF line, gabs ⊗ cutoffpl, and a more complex featureless continuum, cutoffpl ⊗ simpl) and retrieved the difference in Bayesian Information Criterion [ΔBIC; (Schwarz, 1978)] between the two models for 100 simulations per exposure time. From Figure 9 we can see that HEX-P would be about a factor 1.5 more effective (notably above ∼50 ks per phase bin, corresponding to a total 200 ks) than XMM-Newton & NuSTAR in distinguishing different continuum models, therefore reducing uncertainties related to the presence of CRSF lines in the ULX spectra.
FIGURE 9. ΔBIC between the two competing models presented in Walton et al. (2018a) (a simpler continuum including the CRSF vs. a more complex featureless continuum) fitted to the pulsed component of NGC 3000 ULX1 for HEX-P (top) and combined XMM-Newton + NuSTAR observations (bottom) for different exposure times. 100 realizations are shown for each exposure time, as indicated by the colors. For comparison, we also show the value retrieved by Walton et al. (2018a) using 140 of EPIC-pn, 190 ks of combined EPIC-MOS, and 180 ks of combined NuSTAR observations (dashed line). We can see that HEX-P would be about a factor 1.5 more effective (notably above ∼30 ks) in distinguishing these two different continuum models. Note that the exposure times are given for a quarter of the full pulse cycle and therefore total exposure times would be four times the values shown.
The same procedure as above was followed to explore the ability of HEX-P to detect the 4.5 keV CRSF originally detected in the Chandra spectrum of M51 ULX-8 by Brightman et al. (2018). We used the models reported by Middleton et al. (2019a), who carried out a more detailed analysis of the continuum (modelled with a soft diskbb and a cutoffpl for the high energy emission). We found that a 50 ks HEX-P observation detects the line at the ∼97% (2.2σ) level while a 100 ks exposure detects the line in excess of 99.73% (3σ) (to be compared with the 99.98% or 3.8σ detection by Chandra in 180 ks). Figure 8 shows the spectrum as observed by HEX-P.
Another unsolved problem HEX-P will tackle is determining the population of particles producing the CSRF lines. In the case of electrons, further associated lines at the harmonic frequencies are expected, whereas protons are expected to produce lines only at the fundamental frequency [see Staubert et al. (2019) and references therein]. Brightman et al. (2018) were unable to detect any harmonic feature at 9 keV, likely due to the low effective area of Chandra in this band. If we assume an additional line with the same properties (width and depth) as the fundamental but at twice the energy, the significance of the CRSF detection (now combined) would obviously increase (for 100 ks, an additional ∼Δχ2 = 26 compared to the case where only the fundamental is present in the spectrum). We found that an exposure of about 800 ks using HEX-P would allow us to detect the harmonic at the 99% (2.6σ) level alone. At this significance, combining both features will allow us to unambiguously identifying whether the CRSF is due to electrons or protons and thus accurately determine the magnetic field strength close to the NS.
4 Conclusion
As extragalactic sources, every ULX study–population, spectroscopy, temporal analysis–is affected by the sensitivity, angular resolution and instrumental background of X-ray telescopes. All major discoveries in the field of ULXs have been driven by instruments combining focusing capabilities and effective area over the
HEX-P’s low- and high-energy telescopes ensure broadband simultaneous coverage of the X-ray spectrum and excellent angular resolution, significantly improved over both XMM-Newton (for the LET) and NuSTAR (for the HETs). Thanks to the lower background ensured by its small point-spread function, HEX-P facilitates the identification of ULXs through their distinct curved spectra even at large distances.
The design of the HEX-P mission would make it the ideal facility to shed light on a large number of questions regarding ULXs and super-Eddington accretion in general. In particular, broad-band and good energy resolution spectra would lead to a deep understanding of the balance between the mass inflow and outflow. HEX-P will also enrich ULX population studies, for example, by identifying the presence of NSs in ULXs through the detection of pulsations and CRSFs with significantly higher fidelity than existing missions. As shown in Section 3.2, HEX-P surpasses the sensitivity of NuSTAR and XMM-Newton in detecting pulsations from sources in crowded fields, especially ULXs. As a result, HEX-P extends the range for detecting pulsars to distances 2–5 times farther than currently achievable, thereby probing a much larger (8–125 times) volume. This will permit access to a statistically significant population of bright extragalactic X-ray pulsars for the very first time. Further demonstration of HEX-P’s capabilities in pulsar searches in crowded environments can be found in Mori et al. (Galactic Center) and Alford et al. (2023) (Magnetars, CCOs) in this volume.
In addition to the above, the L1 orbit of HEX-P enables a continuous observation of a large fraction of the sky, without Earth occultation (an issue for NuSTAR, which is located in a low Earth orbit) or increased particle background from the Van Allen belts (an issue for XMM-Newton and Chandra, with their highly elliptical orbits). This allows a significantly shorter “clock time” (actual time spent observing, as opposed to clean source exposure), while the broad bandpass of HEX-P eliminates the issues due to differing observation windows when coordinating satellites in different orbits (Middleton et al., 2017). This makes HEX-P more efficient, enabling observations of more sources in a given amount of time, with much longer exposure times for observations constrained by clock time (e.g., coordinated observations, orbital measurements).
In summary, the HEX-P mission concept holds tremendous promise for advancing our understanding of ULXs and the physics behind super-Eddington accretion. Its broad energy coverage, improved sensitivity, and exceptional spectral and timing capabilities establish it as a powerful tool for investigating ULXs and the fundamental physics at play.
Data availability statement
The raw data supporting the conclusion of this article will be made available by the authors, without undue reservation.
Author contributions
MaB: Conceptualization, Formal Analysis, Investigation, Software, Supervision, Visualization, Writing–original draft, Writing–review and editing. MM: Conceptualization, Supervision, Writing–original draft, Writing–review and editing. CP: Formal Analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Visualization, Writing–original draft. AG: Formal Analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Visualization, Writing–original draft. DW: Conceptualization, Supervision, Writing–review and editing. MuB: Writing–review and editing, Conceptualization. BL: Writing–review and editing, Methodology, Software. TR: Writing–review and editing, Conceptualization. GV: Writing–review and editing, Conceptualization, Investigation, Methodology. JA: Writing–review and editing. RA: Writing–review and editing. EA: Writing–review and editing. LD: Writing–review and editing. HEa: Writing–review and editing. HEl: Writing–review and editing. JG: Writing–review and editing, Funding acquisition, Supervision. GL: Writing–review and editing. AJ: Writing–review and editing. KMa: Writing–review and editing, Funding acquisition, Supervision. CM: Writing–review and editing. SM: Writing–review and editing. KMo: Writing–review and editing, Software. FP: Writing–review and editing. KO: Writing–review and editing. MP: Writing–review and editing. DS: Writing–review and editing, Funding acquisition, Supervision. GY: Writing–review and editing. AW: Writing–review and editing.
Funding
The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. MaB was funded in part by PRIN TEC INAF 2019 “SpecTemPolar!—Timing analysis in the era of high-throughput photon detectors.” TR acknowledges funding from STFC as part of the consolidated grants ST/T000244/1 and ST/X001075/1. GV acknowledges support by Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation (H.F.R.I.) under the “3rd Call for H.F.R.I. Research Projects to support Postdoctoral Researchers” through the project ASTRAPE (Project ID 7802). The work of DS was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with NASA.
Conflict of interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Publisher’s note
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.
Footnotes
1See Ludlam et al. (2023), this volume, for CRSF studies on bright Galactic sources with HEX-P.
2They can be downloaded at https://www.sternwarte.uni-erlangen.de/sixte/instruments/
3The galaxy does not have a bright AGN in the center. Such a source could, in some cases, dominate the emission close to the nucleus, and would be a source of confusion for the detection of ULXs for all instruments, plausibly more so for XMM-Newton and NuSTAR, that have a broader PSF.
4See, e.g., the XMM-Newton science analysis software documentation, https://xmm-tools.cosmos.esa.int/external/xmm_user_support/documentation/sas_usg/USG/
5Here, we are neglecting data loss due to occultation or flaring during the orbit. Taking them into account would advantage HEX-P further, because the same exposure would be obtained in shorter observations.
6Note that with PFR we are comparing the pulsed flux, the integral of the AC component of the pulse, to the total flux. The more commonly used pulsed fraction (PF), instead, compares the amplitude of the pulsation to the mean or the maximum of the pulse. Our definition is more independent of pulse shape.
7Or better, a random number following a Poisson distribution around that value.
8https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/xanadu/xspec/manual/node41.html
9https://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/xanadu/xspec/python/html/extended.html
10https://spex-xray.github.io/spex-help/index.html
11As determined through Δχ2, using the affected spectral bins as the number of free trials.
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Keywords: ultraluminous X-ray sources, HEX-P, pulsars, black holes, accretion, spectra
Citation: Bachetti M, Middleton MJ, Pinto C, Gúrpide A, Walton DJ, Brightman M, Lehmer B, Roberts TP, Vasilopoulos G, Alford J, Amato R, Ambrosi E, Dai L, Earnshaw HP, El Byad H, García JA, Luca Israel G, Jaodand A, Madsen K, Maitra C, Mandel S, Mori K, Pintore F, Ohsuga K, Pilia M, Stern D, Younes G and Wolter A (2023) The high energy X-ray probe (HEX-P): studying extreme accretion with ultraluminous X-ray sources. Front. Astron. Space Sci. 10:1289432. doi: 10.3389/fspas.2023.1289432
Received: 05 September 2023; Accepted: 26 October 2023;
Published: 27 November 2023.
Edited by:
Renee Ludlam, Wayne State University, United StatesReviewed by:
Carlos Frajuca, Federal University of Rio Grande, BrazilRyan Urquhart, Michigan State University, United States
Federico García, Argentine Institute of Radio Astronomy, Argentina
Copyright © 2023 Bachetti, Middleton, Pinto, Gúrpide, Walton, Brightman, Lehmer, Roberts, Vasilopoulos, Alford, Amato, Ambrosi, Dai, Earnshaw, El Byad, García, Luca Israel, Jaodand, Madsen, Maitra, Mandel, Mori, Pintore, Ohsuga, Pilia, Stern, Younes and Wolter. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Matteo Bachetti, matteo.bachetti@inaf.it