My guess is that the shorter, more energetic UV rays are bumping the outermost electrons off the phosphorus resulting in the destabilization of the phosphorus. The longer, less energetic X-rays aren't as fast at achieving the ionization energy, so by the time the sample is finished running, more stable compounds exist. So basically, UV ionization occurs faster than X-ray ionization.
I'm probably completely off the wagon about this, but I thought I should at least give it a shot.