Doubling the number of Be/X-ray binaries in the SMC
Frank Haberl and
M. Sasaki
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik,
Garching, Germany
A correlation of X-ray source and H
emission-line object catalogues in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC)
shows that more than two thirds of the optically identified Be stars
in Be/X-ray binaries are found as emission-line objects in the
catalogues. On the basis of this result we propose up to 25 X-ray
sources mainly from recent
ROSAT
catalogues as new Be/X-ray binaries and give their likely optical
counterparts. Also for the five yet unidentified X-ray pulsars in the
SMC we propose emission-line stars as counterparts. This more than
doubles the number of known high mass X-ray binary systems in this
nearby galaxy. The spatial distribution of the new candidates is
similar to that of the already identified Be/X-ray binaries with a
strong concentration along the SMC main body and some systems in the
eastern wing. The new candidates contribute mainly to the
low-luminosity end of the X-ray luminosity distribution of Be/X-ray
binaries. A comparison with the luminosity distribution in the Milky
Way reveals no significant differences at the high-luminosity end and
the large number of low-luminosity systems in the SMC suggests that
many such systems may still be undetected in the Galaxy.
The overall ratio of known Be to OB supergiant X-ray binaries in the
SMC is an order of magnitude larger than in the Galaxy, however, might
show spatial variations. While in the eastern wing the ratio is
comparable to that in the Galaxy no supergiant X-ray binary is
currently known in the main body of the SMC. Possible explanations
include a different star formation history over the last
15 My.
Accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics
Preprints from
fwh@mpe.mpg.de
or on the web at
ftp://ftp.xray.mpe.mpg.de/people/fwh/SMC_BeX/
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