The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2023)

The Large Deficit of HMXB Emission from Luminous Infrared Galaxies: The Case of the Circumnuclear Starburst Ring in NGC 7552

  • Lacey West,
  • Kristen Garofali,
  • Bret D. Lehmer,
  • Andrea Prestwich,
  • Rafael Eufrasio,
  • Wasutep Luangtip,
  • Timothy P. Roberts,
  • Andreas Zezas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acd9aa
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 952, no. 1
p. 22

Abstract

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Luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs), the most extreme star-forming galaxies in the nearby ( D < 30 Mpc) universe, show a notable X-ray emission deficiency (up to a factor of ∼10) compared with predictions from scaling relations of galaxy-wide high-mass X-ray binary (HMXB) luminosity with star formation rate. In the nearby (≈20 Mpc) LIRG NGC 7552, the majority of the IR emission originates in a circumnuclear starburst ring, which has been resolved into several discrete knots of star formation. We present results from recent Chandra observations of NGC 7552, which reveal significant deficits in the 2–7 keV X-ray luminosities from two of the most powerful star-forming knots. We hypothesize that the expected luminous HMXB populations in these knots are either (1) obscured by very large column densities or (2) suppressed due to the knots having relatively high metallicity and/or very young ages (≲5 Myr). We distinguish between these possibilities using data from recent NuSTAR observations, whose sensitivity above 10 keV is capable of uncovering heavily obscured HMXB populations, since emission at these energies is more immune to absorption effects. We find no evidence of a heavily obscured HMXB population in the central region of NGC 7552, suggesting suppressed HMXB formation. We further show that metallicity-dependent scaling relations cannot fully account for the observed deficit from the most powerful star-forming knots or the central region as a whole. Thus, we suggest that recent bursts in local star formation activity likely drive the high L _IR within these regions on timescales ≲5 Myr, shorter than the timescale required for the formation of HMXBs.

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