The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

Exploring X-Ray Properties of Low-metallicity Dwarf Galaxies

  • Jenna M. Cann,
  • Kimberly A. Weaver,
  • Ryan W. Pfeifle,
  • Nathan J. Secrest,
  • Shobita Satyapal,
  • Mario Gliozzi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad0a6b
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 961, no. 2
p. 178

Abstract

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One of the primary outstanding questions in extragalactic astronomy is the formation and early evolution of the supermassive black holes that are seen in nearly every massive galaxy. Low-metallicity dwarf galaxies may offer the most representative local analogs to pristine early galaxies, making them a vital tool in probing black hole seed models through the study of the intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) possibly hosted therein; though these dwarf galaxies, and the IMBHs they may host, are typically not as well-studied in this context as their higher-metallicity and higher-mass counterparts. In this paper, we explore the X-ray properties of a sample of 37 low-metallicity dwarf galaxies using archival XMM observations, and we compare the properties of this population against a representative sample of higher-metallicity counterparts. We report the detection of 10 sources with 0.3–10 keV luminosity in excess of 10 ^40 erg s ^−1 within the low-metallicity sample, which we highlight for followup as potential IMBH candidates. Finally, we discuss the differing multiwavelength scaling relations (e.g., L _X – L _W2 , L _X –star formation rate) between the two galaxy populations, as well as the sample’s L _X as a function of metallicity.

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