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Exploration of faint X-ray and radio sources in the massive globular cluster M14: A UV-bright counterpart to Nova Ophiuchus 1938

Exploration of faint X-ray and radio sources in the massive globular cluster M14: A UV-bright counterpart to Nova Ophiuchus 1938
Exploration of faint X-ray and radio sources in the massive globular cluster M14: A UV-bright counterpart to Nova Ophiuchus 1938
Using a 12 ks archival Chandra X-ray Observatory ACIS-S observation on the massive globular cluster (GC) M14, we detect a total of 7 faint X-ray sources within its half-light radius at a 0.5--7keV depth of 2.5 x 1031 ergs-1. We cross-match the X-ray source positions with a catalogue of the Very Large Array radio point sources and a Hubble Space Telescope (HST) UV/optical/near-IR photometry catalogue, revealing radio counterparts to 2 and HST counterparts to 6 of the X-ray sources. In addition, we also identify a radio source with the recently discovered millisecond pulsar PSR 1737−0314A. The brightest X-ray source, CX1, appears to be consistent with the nominal position of the classic nova Ophiuchi 1938 (Oph 1938), and both Oph 1938 and CX1 are consistent with a UV-bright variable HST counterpart, which we argue to be the source of the nova eruption in 1938. This makes Oph 1938 the second classic nova recovered in a Galactic GC since Nova T Scorpii in M80. CX2 is consistent with the steep-spectrum radio source VLA8, which unambiguously matches a faint blue source; the steepness of VLA8 is suggestive of a pulsar nature, possibly a transitional millisecond pulsar with a late K dwarf companion, though an active galactic nucleus (AGN) cannot be ruled out. The other counterparts to the X-ray sources are all suggestive of chromospherically active binaries or background AGNs, so their nature requires further membership information.
astro-ph.HE
1365-2966
11491–11506
Zhao, Yue
07eafc45-e1eb-459f-99ab-77c28ef3ba65
D'Antona, Francesca
0d927fcd-9317-4486-b3a6-76dbc9c3de2e
Milone, Antonino P.
b1e95ce1-7026-4155-a67d-c8795e6ec18f
Heinke, Craig
9497af53-26df-4701-8621-6752b0398161
Zhao, Jiaqi
769a4356-305e-49dc-b2e1-13ac33254a78
Lugger, Phyllis
7b9b6d9b-1f93-4bdd-9828-baee02c80c30
Cohn, Haldan
c20a687d-c882-4ca3-8a8a-3f3fb3525df7
Zhao, Yue
07eafc45-e1eb-459f-99ab-77c28ef3ba65
D'Antona, Francesca
0d927fcd-9317-4486-b3a6-76dbc9c3de2e
Milone, Antonino P.
b1e95ce1-7026-4155-a67d-c8795e6ec18f
Heinke, Craig
9497af53-26df-4701-8621-6752b0398161
Zhao, Jiaqi
769a4356-305e-49dc-b2e1-13ac33254a78
Lugger, Phyllis
7b9b6d9b-1f93-4bdd-9828-baee02c80c30
Cohn, Haldan
c20a687d-c882-4ca3-8a8a-3f3fb3525df7

Zhao, Yue, D'Antona, Francesca, Milone, Antonino P., Heinke, Craig, Zhao, Jiaqi, Lugger, Phyllis and Cohn, Haldan (2023) Exploration of faint X-ray and radio sources in the massive globular cluster M14: A UV-bright counterpart to Nova Ophiuchus 1938. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 527 (4), 11491–11506. (doi:10.1093/mnras/stad3980).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Using a 12 ks archival Chandra X-ray Observatory ACIS-S observation on the massive globular cluster (GC) M14, we detect a total of 7 faint X-ray sources within its half-light radius at a 0.5--7keV depth of 2.5 x 1031 ergs-1. We cross-match the X-ray source positions with a catalogue of the Very Large Array radio point sources and a Hubble Space Telescope (HST) UV/optical/near-IR photometry catalogue, revealing radio counterparts to 2 and HST counterparts to 6 of the X-ray sources. In addition, we also identify a radio source with the recently discovered millisecond pulsar PSR 1737−0314A. The brightest X-ray source, CX1, appears to be consistent with the nominal position of the classic nova Ophiuchi 1938 (Oph 1938), and both Oph 1938 and CX1 are consistent with a UV-bright variable HST counterpart, which we argue to be the source of the nova eruption in 1938. This makes Oph 1938 the second classic nova recovered in a Galactic GC since Nova T Scorpii in M80. CX2 is consistent with the steep-spectrum radio source VLA8, which unambiguously matches a faint blue source; the steepness of VLA8 is suggestive of a pulsar nature, possibly a transitional millisecond pulsar with a late K dwarf companion, though an active galactic nucleus (AGN) cannot be ruled out. The other counterparts to the X-ray sources are all suggestive of chromospherically active binaries or background AGNs, so their nature requires further membership information.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 December 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 December 2023
Additional Information: 17 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
Keywords: astro-ph.HE

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 486405
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486405
ISSN: 1365-2966
PURE UUID: e22265dd-4df9-4d26-a153-4ea3125312bd

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Date deposited: 19 Jan 2024 18:24
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:05

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Contributors

Author: Yue Zhao
Author: Francesca D'Antona
Author: Antonino P. Milone
Author: Craig Heinke
Author: Jiaqi Zhao
Author: Phyllis Lugger
Author: Haldan Cohn

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