230 research outputs found
External Compton emission from relativistic jets in Galactic black hole candidates and ultraluminous X-ray sources
Galactic binary systems that contain a black hole candidate emit hard X-rays
in their low luminosity mode. We show that this emission can be understood as
due to the Compton scattering of photons from the companion star and/or the
accretion disk by relativistic electrons in a jet. The same electrons are also
responsible for the radio emission. Two sources -- XTE J1118+480 and Cygnus X-1
-- are modelled as representatives of black holes with low and high luminosity
companion stars respectively. We further show that the ultraluminous compact
X-ray sources observed in nearby galaxies have the properties expected of
stellar mass black holes with high luminosity companions in which the jet is
oriented close to our line of sight.Comment: Submitted to A&A letters, Oct 16, 200
Chandra Observations of the Radio Galaxy 3C 445 and the Hotspot X-ray Emission Mechanism
We present new {\it Chandra} observations of the radio galaxy 3C 445,
centered on its southern radio hotspot. Our observations detect X-ray emission
displaced upstream and to the west of the radio-optical hotspot. Attempting to
reproduce both the observed spectral energy distribution (SED) and the
displacement, excludes all one zone models. Modeling of the radio-optical
hotspot spectrum suggests that the electron distribution has a low energy
cutoff or break approximately at the proton rest mass energy. The X-rays could
be due to external Compton scattering of the cosmic microwave background
(EC/CMB) coming from the fast (Lorentz factor ) part of a
decelerating flow, but this requires a small angle between the jet velocity and
the observer's line of sight (). Alternatively, the
X-ray emission can be synchrotron from a separate population of electrons. This
last interpretation does not require the X-ray emission to be beamed.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, ApJ, in pres
A Universal Scaling for the Energetics of Relativistic Jets From Black Hole Systems
Black holes generate collimated, relativistic jets which have been observed
in gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), microquasars, and at the center of some galaxies
(active galactic nuclei; AGN). How jet physics scales from stellar black holes
in GRBs to the supermassive ones in AGNs is still unknown. Here we show that
jets produced by AGNs and GRBs exhibit the same correlation between the kinetic
power carried by accelerated particles and the gamma-ray luminosity, with AGNs
and GRBs lying at the low and high-luminosity ends, respectively, of the
correlation. This result implies that the efficiency of energy dissipation in
jets produced in black hole systems is similar over 10 orders of magnitude in
jet power, establishing a physical analogy between AGN and GRBs.Comment: Published in Science, 338, 1445 (2012), DOI: 10.1126/science.1227416.
This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of
the AAAS for personal use, not for redistribution. Corrected typo in equation
4 of the supplementary materia
Relativistic and slowing down: the flow in the hotspots of powerful radio galaxies and quasars
Pairs of radio emitting jets with lengths up to several hundred kiloparsecs
emanate from the central region (the `core') of radio loud active galaxies.
In the most powerful of them, these jets terminate in the `hotspots', compact
high brightness regions, where the jet flow collides with the intergalactic
medium (IGM). Although it has long been established that in their inner
(parsec) regions these jet flows are relativistic, it is still not clear
if they remain so at their largest (hundreds of kiloparsec) scales. We argue
that the X-ray, optical and radio data of the hotspots, despite their
at-first-sight disparate properties, can be unified in a scheme involving a
relativistic flow upstream of the hotspot that decelerates to the
sub-relativistic speed of its inferred advance through the IGM and viewed at
different angles to its direction of motion. This scheme, besides providing an
account of the hotspot spectral properties with jet orientation, it also
suggests that the large-scale jets remain relativistic all the way to the
hotspots.Comment: to appear in ApJ
The Optical Variability of the Quasar 3C~279: The Signature of a Decelerating Jet?
A recent optical monitoring campaign on the prominent quasar 3C279 revealed a
period of a remarkably clean exponential decay of BVRI fluxes with time, with a
time constant of 12.8 d, over about 14 days. This is clearly too long to be
associated with radiative cooling. Here we propose that this may be the
signature of deceleration of the synchrotron emitting jet component. We develop
a model analogous to the relativistic blast wave model for GRBs, including
radiative energy losses and radiation drag, to simulate the deceleration of a
relativistically moving plasmoid in the moderately dense AGN environment.
Synchrotron, SSC and external Compton emission are evaluated self-consistently.
We show that the observed optical light curve decay can be successfully
reproduced with this model. The decelerating plasmoid model predicts a delayed
X-ray flare, about 2 - 3 weeks after the onset of the quasi-exponential light
curve decay in the optical. A robust prediction of this model, which can be
tested with Fermi and simultaneous optical monitoring, is that the peak in the
gamma-ray light curve at ~ 100 MeV is expected to be delayed by a few days with
respect to the onset of the optical decay, while the VHE gamma-rays are
expected to track the optical light curve closely with a delay of at most a few
hours.Comment: Accepted for Publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Deep Multiwaveband Observations of the Jets of 0208-512 and 1202-262
We present deep {\it HST, Chandra, VLA} and {\it ATCA} images of the jets of
PKS 0208--512 and PKS 1202--262, which were found in a {\it Chandra} survey of
a flux-limited sample of flat-spectrum radio quasars with jets (see Marshall et
al., 2005). We discuss in detail their X-ray morphologies and spectra. We find
optical emission from one knot in the jet of PKS 1202--262 and two regions in
the jet of PKS 0208--512. The X-ray emission of both jets is most consistent
with external Comptonization of cosmic microwave background photons by
particles within the jet, while the optical emission is most consistent with
the synchrotron process. We model the emission from the jet in this context and
discuss implications for jet emission models, including magnetic field and
beaming parameters.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, ApJ in pres
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