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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

Fast infrared variability from the black-hole candidate MAXI J1535$-$571 and tight constraints on the modelling

(2021)

Authors:

FM Vincentelli, P Casella, D Russell, MC Baglio, A Veledina, T Maccarone, J Malzac, R Fender, K O'Brien, P Uttley
More details from the publisher

Very low-frequency oscillations from the 11 Hz pulsar in Terzan 5: frame-dragging back on the table

(2021)

Authors:

Lise du Buisson, Sara E Motta, Rob P Fender
More details from the publisher

The Galactic center chimneys: the base of the multiphase outflow of the Milky Way

Astronomy and Astrophysics European Southern Observatory 646 (2021) A66

Authors:

G Ponti, Mr Morris, E Churazov, I Heywood, Robert Fender

Abstract:

Context. Outflows and feedback are key ingredients of galaxy evolution. Evidence for an outflow arising from the Galactic center (GC) – the so-called GC chimneys – has recently been discovered at radio, infrared, and X-ray bands.
Aims. We undertake a detailed examination of the spatial relationships between the emission in the different bands in order to place constraints on the nature and history of the chimneys and to better understand their impact on the GC environment and their relation with Galactic scale outflows.
Methods. We compare X-ray, radio, and infrared maps of the central few square degrees.
Results. The X-ray, radio, and infrared emissions are deeply interconnected, affecting one another and forming coherent features on scales of hundreds of parsecs, therefore indicating a common physical link associated with the GC outflow. We debate the location of the northern chimney and suggest that it might be located on the front side of the GC because of a significant tilt of the chimneys toward us. We report the presence of strong shocks at the interface between the chimneys and the interstellar medium, which are traced by radio and warm dust emission. We observe entrained molecular gas outflowing within the chimneys, revealing the multiphase nature of the outflow. In particular, the molecular outflow produces a long, strong, and structured shock along the northwestern wall of the chimney. Because of the different dynamical times of the various components of the outflow, the chimneys appear to be shaped by directed large-scale winds launched at different epochs. The data support the idea that the chimneys are embedded in an (often dominant) vertical magnetic field, which likely diverges with increasing latitude. We observe that the thermal pressure associated with the hot plasma appears to be smaller than the ram pressure of the molecular outflow and the magnetic pressure. This leaves open the possibility that either the main driver of the outflow is more powerful than the observed hot plasma, or the chimneys represent a “relic” of past and more powerful activity.
Conclusions. These multiwavelength observations corroborate the idea that the chimneys represent the channel connecting the quasi-continuous, but intermittent, activity at the GC with the base of the Fermi bubbles. In particular, the prominent edges and shocks observed in the radio and mid-infrared bands testify to the most powerful, more recent outflows from the central parsecs of the Milky Way.
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Classification of multiwavelength transients with machine learning

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 502:1 (2021) 206-224

Authors:

K Sooknunan, M Lochner, Bruce A Bassett, HV Peiris, R Fender, AJ Stewart, M Pietka, PA Woudt, JD McEwen, O Lahav
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The Galactic center chimneys: The base of the multiphase outflow of the Milky Way

(2021)

Authors:

G Ponti, MR Morris, E Churazov, I Heywood, RP Fender
More details from the publisher

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