1,109 research outputs found
Galactic X-ray binary jets
With their relatively fast variability time-scales, Galactic X-ray binaries
provide an excellent laboratory to explore the physics of accretion and related
phenomena, most notably outflows, over different regimes. After comparing the
phenomenology of jets in black hole X-ray binary systems to that of neutron
stars, here I discuss the role of the jet at very low Eddington ratios, and
present preliminary results obtained by fitting the broadband spectral energy
distribution of a quiescent black hole binary with a `maximally jet-dominated'
model.Comment: Refereed version, accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space
Scienc
Energetics of jets from X-ray binaries
I discuss the energetics of synchrotron-emitting outflows, increasingly found
to be present in many different classes of X-ray binary systems. It is shown
that the outflow is likely to be comparable in power to the integrated X-ray
luminosity, traditionally taken to be an indicator of the global mass-transfer
rate. This is especially found to be the case in the (low/)hard states of black
hole candidate systems. I conclude that jets are extremely important,
energetically and dynamically, for the accretion process in the majority of
known X-ray binary systems.Comment: To be published in `Proceedings of the Third Microquasar Workshop:
Granada Workshop on galactic relativistic jet sources', Eds A. J.
Castro-Tirado, J. Greiner and J. M. Paredes, Astrophysics and Space Science,
in pres
Radio emission of the Galactic X-rays binaries with relativistic jets
Variable non-thermal radio emission from Galactic X-ray binaries is a trace
of relativistic jets, created near accretion disks. The spectral
characteristics of a lot of radio flares in the X-ray binaries with jets (RJXB)
is discussed in this report. We carried out several long daily monitoring
programs with the RATAN-600 radio telescope of the sources: SS433, Cyg X-3,
LSI+61o303, GRS 1915+10 and some others. We also reviewed some data from the
GBI monitoring program at two frequencies and hard X-ray BATSE (20-100 keV) and
soft X-ray RTXE (2-12 keV) ASM data. We confirmed that flaring radio emission
of Cyg X-3 correlated with hard and anti-correlated with soft X-ray emission
during the strong flare (>\tau$ depends upon frequency as tau \propto \nu^{-0.4} in the first
flare and does not depend upon frequency in the second flare, and is equal to
\tau=6+-1 days at frequencies from 0.96 to 21.7 GHz in the last flare in May
1999. Many flaring RJXB show two, exponential and power, laws of flare decay.
Moreover, these different laws could be present in one or several flares and
commonly flare decays are faster at a higher frequency. The decay law seems to
change because of geometric form of the conical hollow jets. The synchrotron
and inverse Compton losses could explain general frequency dependences in flare
evolution. In conclusion we summarized the general radio properties of RJXB.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, 14 Postscript figures, talk given at the Gamov
Memorial International Conference (GMIC'99) "Early Universe: Cosmological
Problems and Instrumental Technologies" in St.Petersburg, 23-27 August, 1999,
to appear in Astron. Astrophys. Trans., 200
A decelerating jet observed by the EVN and VLBA in the X-ray transient XTE J1752-223
The recently discovered Galactic X-ray transient XTE J1752-223 entered its
first known outburst in 2010, emitting from the X-ray to the radio regimes. Its
general X-ray properties were consistent with those of a black hole candidate
in various spectral states, when ejection of jet components is expected. To
verify this, we carried out very long baseline interferometry (VLBI)
observations. The measurements were carried out with the European VLBI Network
(EVN) and the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) at four epochs in 2010 February.
The images at the first three epochs show a moving jet component that is
significantly decelerated by the last epoch, when a new jet component appears
that is likely to be associated with the receding jet side. The overall picture
is consistent with an initially mildly relativistic jet, interacting with the
interstellar medium or with swept-up material along the jet. The brightening of
the receding ejecta at the final epoch can be well explained by initial Doppler
deboosting of the emission in the decelerating jet.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. 5 pages, 2 figure
Radio emission and jets from microquasars
To some extent, all Galactic binary systems hosting a compact object are
potential `microquasars', so much as all galactic nuclei may have been quasars,
once upon a time. The necessary ingredients for a compact object of stellar
mass to qualify as a microquasar seem to be: accretion, rotation and magnetic
field. The presence of a black hole may help, but is not strictly required,
since neutron star X-ray binaries and dwarf novae can be powerful jet sources
as well. The above issues are broadly discussed throughout this Chapter, with a
a rather trivial question in mind: why do we care? In other words: are jets a
negligible phenomenon in terms of accretion power, or do they contribute
significantly to dissipating gravitational potential energy? How do they
influence their surroundings? The latter point is especially relevant in a
broader context, as there is mounting evidence that outflows powered by
super-massive black holes in external galaxies may play a crucial role in
regulating the evolution of cosmic structures. Microquasars can also be thought
of as a form of quasars for the impatient: what makes them appealing, despite
their low number statistics with respect to quasars, are the fast variability
time-scales. In the first approximation, the physics of the jet-accretion
coupling in the innermost regions should be set by the mass/size of the
accretor: stellar mass objects vary on 10^5-10^8 times shorter time-scales,
making it possible to study variable accretion modes and related ejection
phenomena over average Ph.D. time-scales. [Abridged]Comment: 28 pages, 13 figures, To appear in Belloni, T. (ed.): The Jet
Paradigm - From Microquasars to Quasars, Lect. Notes Phys. 794 (2009
On the Origin of Radio Emission in the X-ray States of XTE J1650-500 during the 2001-2002 Outburst
We report on simultaneous radio and X-ray observations of the black hole
candidate XTE J1650-500 during the course of its 2001-2002 outburst. The
scheduling of the observations allowed us to sample the properties of XTE
J1650-50 in different X-ray spectral states, namely the hard state, the steep
power-law state and the thermal dominant state, according to the recent
spectral classification of McClintock & Remillard. The hard state is consistent
with a compact jet dominating the spectral energy distribution at radio
frequencies; however, the current data suggest that its contribution as direct
synchrotron emission at higher energies may not be significant. In that case,
XTE J1650-50 may be dominated by Compton processes (either inverse
Comptonization of thermal disk photons and/or SSC from the base of the compact
jet) in the X-ray regime. We, surprisingly, detect a faint level of radio
emission in the thermal dominant state that may be consistent with the emission
of previously ejected material interacting with the interstellar medium,
similar (but on a smaller angular scale) to what was observed in XTE J1550-564
by Corbel and co-workers. Based on the properties of radio emission in the
steep power-law state of XTE J1650-50, and taking into account the behavior of
other black hole candidates (namely GX 339-4, XTE J1550-564, and XTE J1859+226)
while in the intermediate and steep power-law states, we are able to present a
general pattern of behavior for the origin of radio emission in these two
states that could be important for understanding the accretion-ejection
coupling very close to the black hole event horizon.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 33 pages, 10
figure
The variable radio counterpart and possible large-scale jet of the new Z-source XTE J1701-462
We report radio observations, made with the Australia Telescope Compact
Array, of the X-ray transient XTE J1701-462. This system has been classified as
a new `Z' source, displaying characteristic patterns of behaviour probably
associated with accretion onto a low magnetic field neutron star at close to
the Eddington limit. The radio counterpart is highly variable, and was detected
in six of sixteen observations over the period 2006 January -- April. The
coupling of radio emission to X-ray state, despite limited sampling, appears to
be similar to that of other `Z' sources, in that there is no radio emission on
the flaring branch. The mean radio and X-ray luminosities are consistent with
the other Z sources for a distance of 5--15 kpc. The radio spectrum is
unusually flat, or even inverted, in contrast to the related sources, Sco X-1
and Cir X-1, which usually display an optically thin radio spectrum. Deep
wide-field observations indicate an extended structure three arcminutes to the
south which is aligned with the X-ray binary. This seems to represent a
significant overdensity of radio sources for the field and so, although a
background source remains a strong possibility, we consider it plausible that
this is a large-scale jet associated with XTE J1701-462.Comment: Accepted for publication as a Letter in MNRA
Near-infrared synchrotron emission from the compact jet of GX339-4
We have compiled contemporaneous broadband observations of the black hole
candidate X-ray binary GX 339-4 when in the low/hard X-ray state in 1981 and
1997. The data clearly reveal the presence of two spectral components, with
thermal and non-thermal spectra, overlapping in the optical -- near-infrared
bands. The non-thermal component lies on an extrapolation of the radio spectrum
of the source, and we interpret it as optically thin synchrotron emission from
the powerful, compact jet in the system. Detection of this break from
self-absorbed to optically thin synchrotron emission from the jet allows us to
place a firm lower limit on the ratio of jet (synchrotron) to X-ray
luminosities of %. We further note that extrapolation of the optically
thin synchrotron component from the near-infrared to higher frequencies
coincides with the observed X-ray spectrum, supporting models in which the
X-rays could originate via optically thin synchrotron emission from the jet
(possibly instead of Comptonisation).Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Lette
The first resolved imaging of milliarcsecond-scale jets in Circinus X-1
We present the first resolved imaging of the milliarcsecond-scale jets in the
neutron star X-ray binary Circinus X-1, made using the Australian Long Baseline
Array. The angular extent of the resolved jets is ~20 milliarcseconds,
corresponding to a physical scale of ~150 au at the assumed distance of 7.8
kpc. The jet position angle is relatively consistent with previous
arcsecond-scale imaging with the Australia Telescope Compact Array. The radio
emission is symmetric about the peak, and is unresolved along the minor axis,
constraining the opening angle to be less than 20 degrees. We observe evidence
for outward motion of the components between the two halves of the observation.
Constraints on the proper motion of the radio-emitting components suggest that
they are only mildly relativistic, although we cannot definitively rule out the
presence of the unseen, ultra-relativistic (Lorentz factor >15) flow previously
inferred to exist in this system.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. 6 pages, 4 figure
- …