A NuSTAR view of SS433: Precessional evolution of the jet-disk system

Abstract

SS433 is a Galactic microquasar with powerful outflows (double jet, accretion disk and winds) with well known orbital, precessional and nutational period. In this work we characterise different outflow parameters throughout the precessional cycle of the system. We analyse 10 NuSTAR (3703-70 keV) observations of \sim30~ks that span \sim1.5 precessional cycles. We extract averaged spectra and model them using a combination of a double thermal jet model (bjet) and pure neutral and relativistic reflection (xillverCp and relxilllpCp) over an accretion disk. We find an average jet bulk velocity of β=v/c0.29\beta = v/c \sim0.29 with an opening angle of \lesssim6~degrees. Eastern jet kinetic power ranges from 1 to 103910^{39}~erg/s, with base "coronal" temperatures ToT_o ranging between 14 and 18 keV. Nickel to iron abundances remain constant at \sim9 (within 1σ\sigma). The western to eastern jet flux ratio becomes 1\sim1 on intermediate phases, about 35% of the total precessional orbit. The 3703-70 keV total unabsorbed luminosity of the jet and disk ranges from 2 to 20 ×\times1037^{37}~erg/s, with the disk reflection component contributing mainly to the hard 203020-30 keV excess and the stationary 6.7 keV ionized Fe line complex. At low opening angles Θ\Theta we find that the jet expands sideways following an adiabatic expansion of a gas with temperature ToT_o. Finally, the central source and lower parts of the jet could be hidden by an optically thick region of τ>0.1\tau > 0.1 and size RNH/ne01.5×109R\sim N_H/n_{e0}\sim1.5\times10^9~cm\sim1700~rgr_g for $M_{BH}=3~M_{\odot}

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    Last time updated on 14/11/2022