608 research outputs found
Revealing accretion onto black holes: X-ray reflection throughout three outbursts of GX 339-4
Understanding the dynamics behind black hole state transitions and the
changes they reflect in outbursts has become long-standing problem. The X-ray
reflection spectrum describes the interaction between the hard X-ray source
(the power-law continuum) and the cool accretion disc it illuminates, and thus
permits an indirect view of how the two evolve. We present a systematic
analysis of the reflection spectrum throughout three outbursts (500+
observations) of the black hole binary GX 339-4, representing the largest study
applying a self-consistent treatment of reflection to date. Particular
attention is payed to the coincident evolution of the power-law and reflection,
which can be used to determine the accretion geometry. The hard state is found
to be distinctly reflection weak, however the ratio of reflection to power-law
gradually increases as the source luminosity rises. In contrast the reflection
is found dominate the power-law throughout most of the soft state, with
increasing supremacy as the source decays. We discuss potential dynamics
driving this, favouring inner disc truncation and decreasing coronal height for
the hard and soft states respectively. Evolution of the ionisation parameter,
power-law slope and high-energy cut-off also agree with this interpretation.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
The truncated and evolving inner accretion disc of the black hole GX 339-4
The nature of accretion onto stellar mass black holes in the low/hard state
remains unresolved, with some evidence suggesting that the inner accretion disc
is truncated and replaced by a hot flow. However, the detection of relativistic
broadened Fe emission lines, even at relatively low luminosities, seems to
require an accretion disc extending fully to its innermost stable circular
orbit. Modelling such features is however highly susceptible to degeneracies,
which could easily bias any interpretation. We present the first systematic
study of the Fe line region to track how the inner accretion disc evolves in
the low/hard state of the black hole GX 3394. Our four observations display
increased broadening of the Fe line over two magnitudes in luminosity, which we
use to track any variation of the disc inner radius. We find that the disc
extends closer to the black hole at higher luminosities, but is consistent with
being truncated throughout the entire low/hard state, a result which renders
black hole spin estimates inaccurate at these stages of the outburst.
Furthermore, we show that the evolution of our spectral inner disc radius
estimates corresponds very closely to the trend of the break frequency in
Fourier power spectra, supporting the interpretation of a truncated and
evolving disc in the hard state.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. Some typos corrected from version
The "universal" radio/X-ray flux correlation : the case study of the black hole GX 339-4
The existing radio and X-ray flux correlation for Galactic black holes in the
hard and quiescent states relies on a sample which is mostly dominated by two
sources (GX 339-4 and V404 Cyg) observed in a single outburst. In this paper,
we report on a series of radio and X-ray observations of the recurrent black
hole GX 339-4 with the Australia Telescope Compact Array, the Rossi X-ray
Timing Explorer and the Swift satellites. With our new long term campaign, we
now have a total of 88 quasi-simultaneous radio and X-ray observations of GX
339-4 during its hard state, covering a total of seven outbursts over a
15--year period. Our new measurements represent the largest sample for a
stellar mass black hole, without any bias from distance uncertainties, over the
largest flux variations and down to a level that could be close to quiescence,
making GX 339-4 the reference source for comparison with other accreting
sources (black holes, neutrons stars, white dwarfs and active galactic nuclei).
Our results demonstrate a very strong and stable coupling between radio and
X-ray emission, despite several outbursts of different nature and separated by
a period of quiescence. The radio and X-ray luminosity correlation of the form
L_X ~L_Rad^0.62 +/-0.01 confirms the non-linear coupling between the jet and
the inner accretion flow powers and better defines the standard correlation
track in the radio-X-ray diagram for stellar mass black holes. We further note
epochs of deviations from the fit that significantly exceed the measurement
uncertainties, especially during the formation and destruction of the compact
jets ...[abridged]. We incorporated our new data in a more global study of
black hole candidates strongly supporting a scale invariance in the
jet-accretion coupling of accreting black holes, and confirms the existence of
two populations of sources in the radio/X-ray diagram.Comment: Paper accepted in MNRAS. 18 pages, 9 figure
Absorption lines from magnetically-driven winds in X-ray binaries
High resolution X-ray spectra of black hole X-ray binaries (BHBs) show
blueshifted absorption lines from disk winds which seem to be equatorial. Winds
occur in the Softer (disk-dominated) states of the outburst and are less
prominent or absent in the Harder (power-law dominated) states. We use
self-similar magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) accretion-ejection models to explain
the disk winds in BHBs. In our models, the density at the base of the outflow
from the accretion disk is not a free parameter, but is determined by solving
the full set of dynamical MHD equations. Thus the physical properties of the
outflow are controlled by the global structure of the disk. We studied
different MHD solutions characterized by different values of (a) the disk
aspect ratio () and (b) the ejection efficiency (). We use two
kinds of MHD solutions depending on the absence (cold solution) or presence
(warm solution) of heating at the disk surface. Such heating could be from e.g.
dissipation of energy due to MHD turbulence in the disk or from illumination.
We use each of these MHD solutions to predict the physical parameters of an
outflow; put limits on the ionization parameter (), column density and
timescales, motivated by observational results; and thus select regions within
the outflow which are consistent with the observed winds. The cold MHD
solutions cannot account for winds due to their low ejection efficiency. But
warm solutions can explain the observed physical quantities in the wind because
they can have sufficiently high values of (, implying larger
mass loading at the base of the outflow). Further from our thermodynamic
equilibrium curve analysis for the outflowing gas, we found that in the Hard
state a range of is thermodynamically unstable, and had to be excluded.
This constrain made it impossible to have any wind at all, in the Hard state.Comment: 16 Pages, 10 figures in the main body and 4 figures in the appendix.
Accepted for publication in A&
A close-pair binary in a distant triple supermassive black-hole system
Galaxies are believed to evolve through merging, which should lead to
multiple supermassive black holes in some. There are four known triple black
hole systems, with the closest pair being 2.4 kiloparsecs apart (the third
component is more distant at 3 kiloparsecs), which is far from the
gravitational sphere of influence of a black hole with mass 10
M (about 100 parsecs). Previous searches for compact black hole systems
concluded that they were rare, with the tightest binary system having a
separation of 7 parsecs. Here we report observations of a triple black hole
system at redshift z=0.39, with the closest pair separated by 140
parsecs. The presence of the tight pair is imprinted onto the properties of the
large-scale radio jets, as a rotationally-symmetric helical modulation, which
provides a useful way to search for other tight pairs without needing extremely
high resolution observations. As we found this tight pair after searching only
six galaxies, we conclude that tight pairs are more common than hitherto
believed, which is an important observational constraint for low-frequency
gravitational wave experiments.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures. Published online by Nature on 25 June 2014.
Extremely minor differences with published version exis
A return to strong radio flaring by Circinus X-1 observed with the Karoo Array Telescope test array KAT-7
Circinus X-1 is a bright and highly variable X-ray binary which displays
strong and rapid evolution in all wavebands. Radio flaring, associated with the
production of a relativistic jet, occurs periodically on a ~17-day timescale. A
longer-term envelope modulates the peak radio fluxes in flares, ranging from
peaks in excess of a Jansky in the 1970s to an historic low of milliJanskys
during the years 1994 to 2007. Here we report first observations of this source
with the MeerKAT test array, KAT-7, part of the pathfinder development for the
African dish component of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), demonstrating
successful scientific operation for variable and transient sources with the
test array. The KAT-7 observations at 1.9 GHz during the period 13 December
2011 to 16 January 2012 reveal in temporal detail the return to the
Jansky-level events observed in the 1970s. We compare these data to
contemporaneous single-dish measurements at 4.8 and 8.5 GHz with the HartRAO
26-m telescope and X-ray monitoring from MAXI. We discuss whether the overall
modulation and recent dramatic brightening is likely to be due to an increase
in the power of the jet due to changes in accretion rate or changing Doppler
boosting associated with a varying angle to the line of sight.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS 14 May 201
Formation of the compact jets in the black hole GX 339-4
Galactic black hole binaries produce powerful outflows with emit over almost
the entire electromagnetic spectrum. Here, we report the first detection with
the Herschel observatory of a variable far-infrared source associated with the
compact jets of the black hole transient GX 339-4 during the decay of its
recent 2010-2011 outburst, after the transition to the hard state. We also
outline the results of very sensitive radio observations conducted with the
Australia Telescope Compact Array, along with a series of near-infrared,
optical (OIR) and X-ray observations, allowing for the first time the
re-ignition of the compact jets to be observed over a wide range of
wavelengths. The compact jets first turn on at radio frequencies with an
optically thin spectrum that later evolves to optically thick synchrotron
emission. An OIR reflare is observed about ten days after the onset of radio
and hard X-ray emission, likely reflecting the necessary time to build up
enough density, as well as to have acceleration (e.g. through shocks) along an
extended region in the jets. The Herschel measurements are consistent with an
extrapolation of the radio inverted power-law spectrum, but they highlight a
more complex radio to OIR spectral energy distribution for the jets.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter, 6 pages, 3 Figures + 1
online Tabl
Inclination and relativistic effects in the outburst evolution of black hole transients
We have systematically studied the effect of the orbital inclination in the
outburst evolution of black hole transients. We have included all the systems
observed by the Rossi X-ray timing explorer in which the thermal, accretion
disc component becomes strongly dominant at some point of the outburst.
Inclination is found to modify the shape of the tracks that these systems
display in the colour/luminosity diagrams traditionally used for their study.
Black hole transients seen at low inclination reach softer spectra and their
accretion discs look cooler than those observed closer to edge-on. This
difference can be naturally explained by considering inclination dependent
relativistic effects on accretion discs.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Multiwavelength observations of the black hole transient Swift J1745-26 during the outburst decay
We characterized the broad-band X-ray spectra of Swift J1745-26 during the
decay of the 2013 outburst using INTEGRAL ISGRI, JEM-X and Swift XRT. The X-ray
evolution is compared to the evolution in optical and radio. We fit the X- ray
spectra with phenomenological and Comptonization models. We discuss possible
scenarios for the physical origin of a ~50 day flare observed both in optical
and X- rays ~170 days after the peak of the outburst. We conclude that it is a
result of enhanced mass accretion in response to an earlier heating event. We
characterized the evolution in the hard X-ray band and showed that for the
joint ISGRI-XRT fits, the e-folding energy decreased from 350 keV to 130 keV,
while the energy where the exponential cut-off starts increased from 75 keV to
112 keV as the decay progressed.We investigated the claim that high energy
cut-offs disappear with the compact jet turning on during outburst decays, and
showed that spectra taken with HEXTE on RXTE provide insufficient quality to
characterize cut-offs during the decay for typical hard X-ray fluxes. Long
INTEGRAL monitoring observations are required to understand the relation
between the compact jet formation and hard X-ray behavior. We found that for
the entire decay (including the flare), the X-ray spectra are consistent with
thermal Comptonization, but a jet synchrotron origin cannot be ruled out.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRA
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