19 research outputs found
Polarization from the oscillating magnetized accretion torus
We study oscillations of accretion torus with azimuthal magnetic field. For
several lowest-order modes we calculate eigenfrequencies and eigenfunctions and
calculate corresponding intensity and polarization light curves using advanced
ray-tracing methods.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the conference "The coming of age
of X-ray polarimetry", Rome, Italy, 27-30 April 200
Accretion Disc Evolution in GRO J1655-40 and LMC X-3 with Relativistic and Non-Relativistic Disc Models
Black hole X-ray binaries are ideal environments to study the accretion
phenomena in strong gravitational potentials. These systems undergo dramatic
accretion state transitions and analysis of the X-ray spectra is used to probe
the properties of the accretion disc and its evolution. In this work, we
present a systematic investigation of 1800 spectra obtained by RXTE PCA
observations of GRO J1655-40 and LMC X-3 to explore the nature of the accretion
disc via non-relativistic and relativistic disc models describing the thermal
emission in black-hole X-ray binaries. We demonstrate that the non-relativistic
modelling throughout an outburst with the phenomenological multi-colour disc
model DISKBB yields significantly lower and often unphysical inner disc radii
and correspondingly higher (50-60\%) disc temperatures compared to its
relativistic counterparts KYNBB and KERRBB. We obtained the dimensionless spin
parameters of and for GRO
J1655-40 with KERRBB and KYNBB, respectively. We report a spin value of
for LMC X-3 using the updated black hole mass of 6.98
. Both measurements are consistent with the previous studies.
Using our results, we highlight the importance of self-consistent modelling of
the thermal emission, especially when estimating the spin with the
continuum-fitting method which assumes the disc terminates at the innermost
stable circular orbit at all times.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 23 pages 17 figure
Distribution of kilohertz QPO frequencies and their ratios in the atoll source 4U 1636-53
A recently published study on long term evolution of the frequencies of the
kilohertz quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) in the atoll source 4U 1636-53
concluded that there is no preferred frequency ratio in a distribution of twin
QPOs that was inferred from the distribution of a single frequency alone.
However, we find that the distribution of the ratio of actually observed pairs
of kHz QPO frequencies is peaked close to the 3/2 value, and possibly also
close to the 5/4 ratio. To resolve the apparent contradiction between the two
studies, we examine in detail the frequency distributions of the lower kHz QPO
and the upper kHz QPO detected in our data set. We demonstrate that for each of
the two kHz QPOs (the lower or the upper), the frequency distribution in all
detections of a QPO differs from the distribution of frequency of the same QPO
in the subset of observations where both the kHz QPOs are detected. We conclude
that detections of individual QPOs alone should not be used for calculation of
the distribution of the frequency ratios.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Acta Astronomica (accepted revised version
Recommended from our members
The high energy Universe at ultra-high resolution: the power and promise of X-ray interferometry
We propose the development of X-ray interferometry (XRI), to reveal the Universe at high energies with ultra-high spatial resolution. With baselines which can be accommodated on a single spacecraft, XRI can reach 100 μ as resolution at 10 Å (1.2 keV) and 20 μ as at 2 Å (6 keV), enabling imaging and imaging-spectroscopy of (for example) X-ray coronae of nearby accreting supermassive black holes (SMBH) and the SMBH ‘shadow’; SMBH accretion flows and outflows; X-ray binary winds and orbits; stellar coronae within ∼100 pc and many exoplanets which transit across them. For sufficiently luminous sources XRI will resolve sub-pc scales across the entire observable Universe, revealing accreting binary SMBHs and enabling trigonometric measurements of the Hubble constant with X-ray light echoes from quasars or explosive transients. A multi-spacecraft ‘constellation’ interferometer would resolve well below 1 μ as, enabling SMBH event horizons to be resolved in many active galaxies and the detailed study of the effects of strong field gravity on the dynamics and emission from accreting gas close to the black hole