Zooming in on a sleeping giant: Milliarcsecond High Sensitivity Array imaging of the black hole binary V404 Cyg in quiescence

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 388:4 (2008) 1751-1758

Authors:

JCA Miller-Jones, E Gallo, MP Rupen, AJ Mioduszewski, W Brisken, RP Fender, PG Jonker, TJ Maccarone

Abstract:

Observations of the black hole X-ray binary V404 Cyg with the very long baseline interferometer the High Sensitivity Array (HSA) have detected the source at a frequency of 8.4 GHz, providing a source position accurate to 0.3 mas relative to the calibrator source. The observations put an upper limit of 1.3 mas on the source size (5.2 au at 4 kpc) and a lower limit of 7 × 106 K on its brightness temperature during the normal quiescent state, implying that the radio emission must be non-thermal, most probably synchrotron radiation, possibly from a jet. The radio light curves show a short flare, with a rise time of ∼30 min, confirming that the source remains active in the quiescent state. © 2008 The Authors.

The First Polarimetric Signatures of Infrared Jets in X-Ray Binaries

\apj 672 (2008) 510-515-510-515

Authors:

T Shahbaz, RP Fender, CA Watson, K O Brien

BLAZING TRAILS: MICROQUASARS AS HEAD-TAIL SOURCES AND THE SEEDING OF MAGNETIZED PLASMA INTO THE ISM

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL 686:2 (2008) 1145-1154

Authors:

S Heinz, HJ Grimm, RA Sunyaev, RP Fender

Broadband X-ray spectra of GX 339-4 and the geometry of accreting black holes in the hard state

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL 680:1 (2008) 593-601

Authors:

John A Tomsick, Emrah Kalemci, Philip Kaaret, Sera Markoff, Stephane Corbel, Simone Migliari, Rob Fender, Charles D Bailyn, Michelle M Buxton

Characteristics of EGRET blazars in the VLBA Imaging and Polarimetry Survey (VIPS)

Astrophysical Journal 671:2 (2007) 1355-1364

Authors:

GB Taylor, SE Healey, JF Helmboldt, S Tremblay, CD Fassnacht, RC Walker, LO Sjouwerman, TJ Pearson, ACS Readhead, L Weintraub, N Gehrels, RW Romani, PF Michelson, RD Blandford, G Cotter

Abstract:

We examine the radio properties of EGRET-detected blazars observed as part of the VLBA Imaging and Polarimetry Survey (VIPS). VIPS has a flux limit roughly an order of magnitude below the MOJAVE survey and most other samples that have been used to study the properties of EGRET blazars. At lower flux levels, radio flux density does not directly correlate with gamma-ray flux density. We do find that the EGRET-detected blazars tend to have higher brightness temperatures, greater core fractions, and possibly larger than average jet opening angles. A weak correlation is also found with jet length and with polarization. All of the well-established trends can be explained by systematically larger Doppler factors in the gamma-ray-loud blazars, consistent with the measurements of higher apparent velocities found in monitoring programs carried out at radio frequencies above 10 GHz. © 2007. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.