11,562 research outputs found
Spectral/timing evolution of black-hole binaries
I briefly outline the state-paradigm that has emerged from the study of
black-hole binaries with RossiXTE. This is the starting point of a number of
studies that address the connection between accretion and jet ejection and the
physical nature of the hard spectral components in these systems.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures.To appear in Proceedings of "X-ray Astronomy 2009:
Present Status, Multi-Wavelength Approach and Future Perspectives", Bologna,
Italy, September 7-11, 2009, AIP, eds. A. Comastri, M. Cappi, and L. Angelin
On the harmonics of the low-frequency quasi-periodic oscillation in GRS 1915+105
GRS 1915+105 is a widely studied black hole binary, well known because of its
extremely fast and complex variability. Flaring periods of high variability
alternate with "stable" phases (the plateaux) when the flux is low, the spectra
are hard and the timing properties of the source are similar to those of a
number of black hole candidates in hard spectral state. In the plateaux the
power density spectra are dominated by a low frequency quasi periodic
oscillation (LFQPO) superposed onto a band limited noise continuum and
accompanied by at least one harmonic. In this paper we focus on three plateaux,
presenting the analysis of the power density spectra and in particular of the
LFQPO and its harmonics. While plotting the LFQPO and all the harmonics
together on a frequency-width plane, we found the presence of a positive trend
of broadening when the frequency increases. This trend can shed light in the
nature of the harmonic content of the LFQPO and challenges the usual
interpretation of these timing features.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
X-ray emission from the PSR B1259--63 system near apastron
The PSR B1259--63 system contains a 47 ms radio pulsar in a highly eccentric
binary with a Be-star companion. Strongly time variable X-ray emission was
reported from this system as the pulsar was near apastron in 1992-early 1993.
The variability was primarily deduced from an apparent non-detection of the
\psr system during a first pre-apastron \ros observation in February~1992. We
have re-analyzed the \ros observations of the \psr system. Contrary to the
results of a previous analysis, we find that the \psr system was detected by
\ros during the first off-axis February~1992 observation. The intensity of the
soft X-ray emission of the \psr system before and after the 1992 apastron
appears to vary at most by a factor . Our results sensibly constrain
theoretical models of X-ray emission from the \psr system.Comment: LATEX, Accepted for publ. in ApJ
Does GRS 1915+105 exhibit "canonical" black-hole states?
We have analysed RXTE data of the superluminal source GRS 1915+105 in order
to investigate if, despite its extreme variability, it also exhibits the
canonical source states that characterise other black-hole candidates. The
phenomenology of GRS 1915+105 has been described in terms of three states
(named A, B and C) based on their hardness ratios and position in the
colour-colour diagram. We have investigated the connection between these states
and the canonical behaviour and found that the shape of the power spectral
continuum and the values of the best-fit model parameters to the noise
components in all three states indicate that the source shows properties
similar to the canonical very high state.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Less than perfect quantum wavefunctions in momentum-space: How phi(p) senses disturbances in the force
We develop a systematic approach to determine the large |p| behavior of the
momentum-space wavefunction, phi(p), of a one-dimensional quantum system for
wich the position-space wavefunction, psi(x), has a discontinuous derivative at
any order. We find that if the k-th derivative of the potential energy function
has a discontinuity, there is a corresponding discontinuity in psi^{(k+2)}(x)
at the same point. This discontinuity leads directly to a power-law tail in the
momentum-space wavefunction proportional to 1/p^{k+3}. A number of familiar
pedagogical examples are examined in this context, leading to a general
derivation of the result.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Am. J. Phy
A Unified Description of the Timing Features of Accreting X-ray Binaries
We study an empirical model for a unified description of the power spectra of
accreting neutron stars and black holes. This description is based on a
superposition of multiple Lorentzians and offers the advantage that all QPO and
noise components are dealt with in the same way, without the need of deciding
in advance the nature of each component. This approach also allows us to
compare frequencies of features with high and low coherences in a consistent
manner and greatly facilitates comparison of power spectra across a wide range
of source types and states. We apply the model to six sources, the
low-luminosity X-ray bursters 1E 1724-3045, SLX 1735-269 and GS 1826-24, the
high-latitude transient XTE J1118+480, the bright system Cir X-1, and the Z
source GX 17+2. We find that it provides a good description of the observed
spectra, without the need for a scale-free (1/f) component. We update
previously reported correlations between characteristic frequencies of timing
features in the light of this new approach and discuss similarities between
different types of systems which may point towards similar underlying physics.Comment: 13 pages, to appear in The Astrophysical Journa
Fast variability as a tracer of accretion regimes in black hole transients
We present the rms-intensity diagram for black hole transients. Using
observations taken with the Rossi X-ray timing explorer we study the relation
between the root mean square (rms) amplitude of the variability and the net
count-rate during the 2002, 2004 and 2007 outbursts of the black hole X-ray
binary GX 339-4. We find that the rms-flux relation previously observed during
the hard state in X-ray binaries does not hold for the other states, when
different relations apply. These relations can be used as a good tracer of the
different accretion regimes. We identify the hard, soft and intermediate states
in the rms-intensity diagram. Transitions between the different states are seen
to produce marked changes in the rms-flux relation. We find that one single
component is required to explain the ~ 40 per cent variability observed at low
count rates, whereas no or very low variability is associated to the
accretion-disc thermal component.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 6 pages, 4 figure
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