Evidence for a jet contribution to the optical/infrared light of neutron star X-ray binaries

(2007)

Authors:

DM Russell, RP Fender, PG Jonker

A highly polarised radio jet during the 1998 outburst of the black hole transient XTE J1748-288

(2007)

Authors:

Catherine Brocksopp, James Miller-Jones, Rob Fender, Ben Stappers

The jet-powered optical nebula of Cygnus X–1

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 376:3 (2007) 1341-1349

Authors:

DM Russell, RP Fender, E Gallo, CR Kaiser

The VLBA imaging and polarimetry survey at 5 GHz

Astrophysical Journal 658:1 I (2007) 203-216

Authors:

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

Abstract:

We present the first results of the VLBA Imaging and Polarimetry Survey (VIPS), a 5 GHz VLBI survey of 1127 sources with flat radio spectra. Through automated data reduction and imaging routines, we have produced publicly available I, Q, and U images and have detected polarized flux density from 37% of the sources. We have also developed an algorithm to use each source's I image to automatically classify it as a pointlike source, a core jet, a compact symmetric object (CSO) candidate, or a complex source. Using data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), we have found no significant trend between optical flux and 5 GHz flux density for any of the source categories. Using the velocity width of the Hβ emission line and the monochromatic luminosity at 5100 Å to estimate the central black hole mass, MBH, we have found a weak trend between MBH and 5 GHz luminosity density for objects with SDSS spectra. The mean ratio of the polarized to total 5 GHz flux density for VIPS sources with detected polarized flux density ranges from 1% to 20% with a median value of about 5%. We have also found significant evidence that the directions of the jets in core-jet systems tend to be perpendicular to the electric vector position angles (EVPAs). The data are consistent with a scenario in which ∼24% of the polarized core jets have EVPAs that are antialigned with the directions of their jet components and that have a substantial amount of Faraday rotation. In addition to these initial results, plans for future follow-up observations are discussed. © 2007. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Peak Luminosities of the Hard States of GX 339-4: Implications for the Accretion Geometry, Disk Mass, and Black Hole Mass

(2007)

Authors:

Wenfei Yu, Frederick K Lamb, Robert Fender, Michiel van der Klis