1,542 research outputs found
X-ray and Radio Monitoring of GX 339-4 and Cyg X-1
Previous work by Motch et al. (1985) suggested that in the low/hard state of
GX339-4, the soft X-ray power-law extrapolated backward in energy agrees with
the IR flux level. Corbel and Fender (2002) later showed that the typical hard
state radio power-law extrapolated forward in energy meets the backward
extrapolated X-ray power-law at an IR spectral break, which was explicitly
observed twice in GX339-4. This has been cited as further evidence that jet
synchrotron radiation might make a significant contribution to the observed
X-rays in the hard state. We explore this hypothesis with a series of
simultaneous radio/X-ray hard state observations of GX339-4. We fit these
spectra with a simple, but remarkably successful, doubly broken power-law model
that indeed requires a spectral break in the IR. For most of these
observations, the break position as a function of X-ray flux agrees with the
jet model predictions. We then examine the radio flux/X-ray flux correlation in
Cyg X-1 through the use of 15 GHz radio data, obtained with the Ryle radio
telescope, and Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer data, from the All Sky Monitor and
pointed observations. We find evidence of `parallel tracks' in the radio/X-ray
correlation which are associated with `failed transitions' to, or the beginning
of a transition to, the soft state. We also find that for Cyg X-1 the radio
flux is more fundamentally correlated with the hard, rather than the soft,
X-ray flux.Comment: To Appear in the Proceedings of "From X-ray Binaries to Quasars:
Black Hole Accretion on All Mass Scales" (Amsterdam, July 2004). Eds. T
Maccarone, R. Fender, L. H
Exploring Accretion and Disk-Jet Connections in the LLAGN M81*
We report on a year-long effort to monitor the central supermassive black
hole in M81 in the X-ray and radio bands. Using Chandra and the VLA, we
obtained quasi-simultaneous observations of M81* on seven occasions during
2006. The X-ray and radio luminosity of M81* are not strongly correlated on the
approximately 20-day sampling timescale of our observations, which is
commensurate with viscous timescales in the inner flow and orbital timecales in
a radially-truncated disk. This suggests that short-term variations in black
hole activity may not be rigidly governed by the "fundamental plane", but
rather adhere to the plane in a time-averaged sense. Fits to the X-ray spectra
of M81* with bremsstrahlung models give temperatures that are inconsistent with
the outer regions of very simple advection-dominated inflows. However, our
results are consistent with the X-ray emission originating in a transition
region where a truncated disk and advective flow may overlap. We discuss our
results in the context of models for black holes accreting at small fractions
of their Eddington limit, and the fundamental plane of black hole accretion.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
The central parsecs of M87: jet emission and an elusive accretion disc
We present the first simultaneous spectral energy distribution (SED) of M87
core at a scale of 0.4 arcsec () across the electromagnetic
spectrum. Two separate, quiescent, and active states are sampled that are
characterized by a similar featureless SED of power-law form, and that are thus
remarkably different from that of a canonical active galactic nuclei (AGN) or a
radiatively inefficient accretion source. We show that the emission from a jet
gives an excellent representation of the core of M87 core covering ten orders
of magnitude in frequency for both the active and the quiescent phases. The
inferred total jet power is, however, one to two orders of magnitude lower than
the jet mechanical power reported in the literature. The maximum luminosity of
a thin accretion disc allowed by the data yields an accretion rate of , assuming 10% efficiency. This power
suffices to explain M87 radiative luminosity at the jet-frame, it is however
two to three order of magnitude below that required to account for the jet's
kinetic power. The simplest explanation is variability, which requires the core
power of M87 to have been two to three orders of magnitude higher in the last
200 yr. Alternatively, an extra source of power may derive from black hole
spin. Based on the strict upper limit on the accretion rate, such spin power
extraction requires an efficiency an order of magnitude higher than predicted
from magnetohydrodynamic simulations, currently in the few hundred per cent
range.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Simultaneous multiwavelength observations of V404 Cygni during its 2015 June outburst decay strengthen the case for an extremely energetic jet-base
We present results of multiband optical photometry of the black hole X-ray
binary system V404 Cygni obtained using Wheaton College Observatory's 0.3m
telescope, along with strictly simultaneous INTEGRAL and Swift observations
during 2015 June 25.15--26.33 UT, and 2015 June 27.10--27.34 UT. These
observations were made during the 2015 June outburst of the source when it was
going through an epoch of violent activity in all wavelengths ranging from
radio to -rays. The multiwavelength variability timescale favors a
compact emission region, most likely originating in a jet outflow, for both
observing epochs presented in this work. The simultaneous INTEGRAL/Imager on
Board the Integral Satellite (IBIS) 20--40 keV light curve obtained during the
June 27 observing run correlates very strongly with the optical light curve,
with no detectable delay between the optical bands as well as between the
optical and hard X-rays. The average slope of the dereddened spectral energy
distribution was roughly flat between the - and -bands during the June
27 run, even though the optical and X-ray flux varied by 25 during
the run, ruling out an irradiation origin for the optical and suggesting that
the optically thick to optically thin jet synchrotron break during the
observations was at a frequency larger than that of -band, which is quite
extreme for X-ray binaries. These observations suggest that the optical
emission originated very close to the base of the jet. A strong H
emission line, probably originating in a quasi-spherical nebula around the
source, also contributes significantly in the -band. Our data, in
conjunction with contemporaneous data at other wavelengths presented by other
groups, strongly suggest that the jet-base was extremely compact and energetic
during this phase of the outburst.Comment: 15 pages, 2 tables, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
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
The SED of Low-Luminosity AGNs at high-spatial resolution
The inner structure of AGNs is expected to change below a certain luminosity
limit. The big blue bump, footprint of the accretion disk, is absent for the
majority of low-luminosity AGNs (LLAGNs). Moreover, recent simulations suggest
that the torus, a keystone in the Unified Model, vanishes for nuclei with L_bol
< 10^42 erg/s. However, the study of LLAGN is a complex task due to the
contribution of the host galaxy, which light swamps these faint nuclei. This is
specially critical in the IR range, at the maximum of the torus emission, due
to the contribution of the old stellar population and/or dust in the nuclear
region. Adaptive optics imaging in the NIR (VLT/NaCo) together with diffraction
limited imaging in the mid-IR (VLT/VISIR) permit us to isolate the nuclear
emission for some of the nearest LLAGNs in the Southern Hemisphere. These data
were extended to the optical/UV range (HST), radio (VLA, VLBI) and X-rays
(Chandra, XMM-Newton, Integral), in order to build a genuine spectral energy
distribution (SED) for each AGN with a consistent spatial resolution (< 0.5")
across the whole spectral range. From the individual SEDs, we construct an
average SED for LLAGNs sampled in all the wavebands mentioned before. Compared
with previous multiwavelength studies of LLAGNs, this work covers the mid-IR
and NIR ranges with high-spatial resolution data. The LLAGNs in the sample
present a large diversity in terms of SED shapes. Some of them are very well
described by a self-absorbed synchrotron (e.g. NGC 1052), while some other
present a thermal-like bump at ~1 micron (NGC 4594). All of them are
significantly different when compared with bright Seyferts and quasars,
suggesting that the inner structure of AGNs (i.e. the torus and the accretion
disk) suffers intrinsic changes at low luminosities.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. To appear in the proceedings of "Astrophysics at
High Angular Resolution" (AHAR 2011
Functional Characterisation of Alpha-Galactosidase A Mutations as a Basis for a New Classification System in Fabry Disease
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.The study has been supported partially by an unrestricted scientific grant from Shire Human Genetic Therapies (Germany
The Microquasar Cyg X-1: A Short Review
We review the spectral properties of the black hole candidate Cygnus X-1.
Specifically, we discuss two recent sets of multi-satellite observations. One
comprises a 0.5-500 keV spectrum, obtained with every flying X-ray satellite at
that time, that is among the hardest Cyg X-1 spectra observed to date. The
second set is comprised of 0.5-40 keV Chandra-HETG plus RXTE-PCA spectra from a
radio-quiet, spectrally soft state. We first discuss the "messy astrophysics"
often neglected in the study of Cyg X-1, i.e., ionized absorption from the wind
of the secondary and the foreground dust scattering halo. We then discuss
components common to both state extremes: a low temperature accretion disk, and
a relativistically broadened Fe line and reflection. Hard state spectral models
indicate that the disk inner edge does not extend beyond ~40 GM/c^2, and may
even approach as close as ~6 GM/c^2. The soft state exhibits a much more
prominent disk component; however, its very low normalization plausibly
indicates a spinning black hole in the Cyg X-1 system.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of "Multifrequency Behaviour of High
Energy Cosmic Sources", Frascati Workshop 2011, May 23-28, Vulcano, Italy 5
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