Skip to main content
Home
Department Of Physics text logo
  • Research
    • Our research
    • Our research groups
    • Our research in action
    • Research funding support
    • Summer internships for undergraduates
  • Study
    • Undergraduates
    • Postgraduates
  • Engage
    • For alumni
    • For business
    • For schools
    • For the public
  • Support
Menu
Relativistic Jet from Black Hole

An artist's impression of a relativistic jet propagating away from a black hole at close to the speed of light. Such jets are formed by the inner regions of the accretion flow: matter flowing inwards towards the black hole, via processes which are not yet fully understood. The accretion flow emits primarily in X-rays, the relativistic jet in the radio band: by combing observations in each band we can try and understand how such jets form and how much energy they carry away from the black hole.

Professor Rob Fender

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Hintze Centre for Astrophysical Surveys
  • MeerKAT
  • Pulsars, transients and relativistic astrophysics
  • Rubin-LSST
  • The Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
  • Gamma-ray astronomy
Rob.Fender@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73435
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 712
  • About
  • Publications

A tool to separate optical/infrared disc and jet emission in X-ray transient outbursts: The colour-magnitude diagrams of XTE J1550-564

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 416:3 (2011) 2311-2317

Authors:

DM Russell, D Maitra, RJH Dunn, RP Fender

Abstract:

It is now established that thermal disc emission and non-thermal jet emission can both play a role at optical/infrared (OIR) wavelengths in X-ray transients. The spectra of the jet and disc components differ, as do their dependence on mass accretion properties. Here we demonstrate that the OIR colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) of the evolution of the X-ray transient XTE J1550-564 in outburst can be used to separate the disc from the jet. Monitoring in two wavebands is all that is required. This outburst in 2000 was well studied, and both disc and jet were known to contribute. During the outburst the data follow a well-defined path in the CMD, describing what would be expected from a heated single-temperature blackbody of approximately constant area, except when the data appear redder than this track. This is due to the non-thermal jet component which dominates the OIR moreso during hard X-ray states at high luminosities, and which is quenched in the soft state. The CMD therefore shows state-dependent hysteresis, in analogy with (but not identical to) the well-established X-ray hardness-intensity diagram of black hole transients. The blackbody originates in the X-ray illuminated, likely unwarped, outer accretion disc. We show that the CMD can be approximately reproduced by a model that assumes various correlations between X-ray, OIR disc and OIR jet fluxes. We find evidence for the OIR jet emission to be decoupled from the disc near the peak of the hard state. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.
More details from the publisher
More details
Details from ArXiV

An automated archival Very Large Array transients survey

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 415:1 (2011) 2-10

Authors:

ME Bell, RP Fender, J Swinbank, JCA Miller-Jones, CJ Law, B Scheers, H Spreeuw, MW Wise, BW Stappers, RAMJ Wijers, JWT Hessels, J Masters

Abstract:

In this paper we present the results of a survey for radio transients using data obtained from the Very Large Array archive. We have reduced, using a pipeline procedure, 5037 observations of the most common pointings - i.e. the calibrator fields. These fields typically contain a relatively bright point source and are used to calibrate 'target' observations: they are therefore rarely imaged themselves. The observations used span a time range ~1984-2008 and consist of eight different pointings, three different frequencies (8.4, 4.8 and 1.4 GHz) and have a total observing time of 435 h. We have searched for transient and variable radio sources within these observations using components from the prototype LOFAR transient detection system. In this paper we present the methodology for reducing large volumes of Very Large Array data; and we also present a brief overview of the prototype LOFAR transient detection algorithms. No radio transients were detected in this survey, therefore we place an upper limit on the snapshot rate of GHz frequency transients >8.0 mJy toρ≤0.032 deg-2 that have typical time-scales 4.3 to 45.3 d. We compare and contrast our upper limit with the snapshot rates - derived from either detections or non-detections of transient and variable radio sources - reported in the literature. When compared with the current LogN-LogSdistribution formed from previous surveys, we show that our upper limit is consistent with the observed population. Current and future radio transient surveys will hopefully further constrain these statistics, and potentially discover dominant transient source populations. In this paper we also briefly explore the current transient commissioning observations with LOFAR, and the impact they will make on the field. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.
More details from the publisher

Living in a loft

Proceedings of Science 122 (2011)

Authors:

M Feroci, L Stella, M van der Klis, TJL Courvoisier, M Hernanz, R Hudec, A Santangelo, D Walton, A Zdziarski, D Barret, T Belloni, J Braga, S Brandt, C Budtz-Jørgensen, S Campana, JW den Herder, J Huovelin, GL Israel, M Pohl, P Ray, A Vacchi, S Zane, A Argan, P Attinà, G Bertuccio, E Bozzo, R Campana, D Chakrabarty, E Costa, A De Rosa, E Del Monte, S Di Cosimo, I Donnarumma, Y Evangelista, D Haas, P Jonker, S Korpela, C Labanti, P Malcovati, R Mignani, F Muleri, M Rapisarda, AR Rashevski, N Rea, A Rubini, C Tenzer, C Wilson-Hodge, B Winter, K Wood, G Zampa, N Zampa, MA Abramowicz, MA Alpar, D Altamirano, JM Alvarez, L Amati, C Amoros, LA Antonelli, R Artigue, P Azzarello, M Bachetti, G Baldazzi, M Barbera, C Barbieri, S Basa, A Baykal, R Belmont, L Boirin, V Bonvicini, L Burderi, M Bursa, C Cabanac, E Cackett, GA Caliandro, P Casella, S Chaty, J Chenevez, MJ Coe, A Collura, A Corongiu, S Covino, G Cusumano, F D’Amico, S Dall’Osso, D De Martino, G De Paris, G Di Persio, T Di Salvo, C Done, M Dovčiak, A Drago, U Ertan, S Fabiani, M Falanga, R Fender, P Ferrando, D Della Monica Ferreira, G Fraser, F Frontera, F Fuschino

Abstract:

LOFT (Large area Observatory For x-ray Timing) is an innovative mission concept for the next generation of X-ray experiments, submitted to the ESA Call for Medium size missions “M3”. Recent developments in the field of Silicon detectors allowed us to design a realistic observatory devoted to X-ray timing studies with an effective area above 10 m2, operating in the energy range 2-30 keV with an energy resolution of ∼250 eV. Such an exceedingly large area (20 times that of RXTE/PCA), with a time resolution better than 10 µs, will enable unprecedently fast and accurate time variability studies related to accreting collapsed objects (e.g. fast coherent pulsations and QPOs). The scientific payload is complemented by a coded-mask wide field monitor based on similar detectors. In this paper we present the mission concept, the payload design and the expected performances.

On the nature of the 'radio-quiet' black hole binaries

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 413:3 (2011) 2269-2280

Authors:

P Soleri, R Fender

Abstract:

The coupling between accretion processes and ejection mechanisms in accreting black holes in binary systems can be investigated by empirical relations between the X-ray/radio and X-ray/optical-infrared luminosities. These correlations are valid over several orders of magnitude and were initially thought to be universal. However, recently, many black hole binaries have been found to produce jets that, given certain accretion-powered luminosities, are fainter than expected from the earlier correlations. This shows that black holes with similar accretion flows can produce a broad range of outflows in power, suggesting that some other parameters or factors might be tuning the accretion-ejection coupling. Recent work has already shown that this jet power does not correlate with the reported black hole spin measurements. Here we discuss whether fixed parameters of the binary system (orbital period, disc size, inclination), as well as the properties of the outburst, produce any effect on the energy output in the jet. No obvious dependence is found. We also show that there is no systematic variation in the slope of the radio-X-ray correlation with normalization. We define a jet-toy model in which the bulk Lorentz factor becomes larger than ̃1 above ̃0.1 per cent of the Eddington luminosity. With this model, if we assume random inclination angles which result in highly variable boosting at large Eddington ratios, we are able to reproduce qualitatively the scatter of the X-ray-radio correlation and the 'radio-quiet' population. However, the model seems to be at odds with some other observed properties of the systems. We also compare the 'radio-quiet' black holes with the neutron stars. We show that if a mass correction from the Fundamental Plane is applied, the possibility that they are statistically indistinguishable in the X-ray-radio plane cannot be completely ruled out. This result suggests that some of the outliers could actually be neutron stars or that the disc-jet coupling in the 'radio-quiet' black holes is more similar to the one in neutron stars. © 2011 The Authors. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.
More details from the publisher
More details
Details from ArXiV

Radiatively efficient accreting black holes in the hard state: The case study of H1743-322

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 414:1 (2011) 677-690

Authors:

M Coriat, S Corbel, L Prat, JCA Miller-Jones, D Cseh, AK Tzioumis, C Brocksopp, J Rodriguez, RP Fender, GR Sivakoff

Abstract:

In recent years, much effort has been devoted to unravelling the connection between the accretion flow and the jets in accreting compact objects. In the present work, we report new constraints on these issues, through the long-term study of the radio and X-ray behaviour of the black hole candidate H1743-322. This source is known to be one of the 'outliers' of the universal radio/X-ray correlation, i.e. a group of accreting stellar-mass black holes displaying fainter radio emission for a given X-ray luminosity than expected from the correlation. Our study shows that the radio and X-ray emission of H1743-322 are strongly correlated at high luminosity in the hard spectral state. However, this correlation is unusually steep for a black hole X-ray binary: b~ 1.4 (with Lradio∝LbX). Below a critical luminosity, the correlation becomes shallower until it rejoins the standard correlation with b~ 0.6. Based on these results, we first show that the steep correlation can be explained if the inner accretion flow is radiatively efficient during the hard state, in contrast to what is usually assumed for black hole X-ray binaries in this spectral state. The transition between the steep and the standard correlation would therefore reflect a change from a radiatively efficient to a radiatively inefficient accretion flow. Finally, we investigate the possibility that the discrepancy between 'outliers' and 'standard' black holes arises from the outflow properties rather than from the accretion flow. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.
More details from the publisher
More details

Pagination

  • First page First
  • Previous page Prev
  • …
  • Page 122
  • Page 123
  • Page 124
  • Page 125
  • Current page 126
  • Page 127
  • Page 128
  • Page 129
  • Page 130
  • …
  • Next page Next
  • Last page Last

Footer Menu

  • Contact us
  • Giving to the Dept of Physics
  • Work with us
  • Media

User account menu

  • Log in

Follow us

FIND US

Clarendon Laboratory,

Parks Road,

Oxford,

OX1 3PU

CONTACT US

Tel: +44(0)1865272200

University of Oxfrod logo Department Of Physics text logo
IOP Juno Champion logo Athena Swan Silver Award logo

© University of Oxford - Department of Physics

Cookies | Privacy policy | Accessibility statement

Built by: Versantus

  • Home
  • Research
  • Study
  • Engage
  • Our people
  • News & Comment
  • Events
  • Our facilities & services
  • About us
  • Giving to Physics
  • Current students
  • Staff intranet