Late-outburst radio flaring in SS Cyg and evidence for a powerful kinetic output channel in cataclysmic variables

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 490:1 (2019) L76-L80

Authors:

Rob Fender, Joe Bright, Kunal Mooley, James Miller-Jones

Abstract:

Accreting white dwarfs in binary systems known as cataclysmic variables (CVs) have in recent years been shown to produce radio flares during outbursts, qualitatively similar to those observed from neutron star and black hole X-ray binaries, but their ubiquity and energetic significance for the accretion flow has remained uncertain. We present new radio observations of the CV SS Cyg with Arcminute Microkelvin Imager Large Array, which show for the second time late-ouburst radio flaring, in 2016 April. This flaring occurs during the optical flux decay phase, about 10 d after the well-established early-time radio flaring. We infer that both the early- and late-outburst flares are a common feature of the radio outbursts of SS Cyg, albeit of variable amplitudes, and probably of all dwarf novae. We furthermore present new analysis of the physical conditions in the best-sampled late-outburst flare, from 2016 February, which showed clear optical depth evolution. From this we can infer that the synchrotron-emitting plasma was expanding at about 1 per cent of the speed of light, and at peak had a magnetic field of order 1 G and total energy content ≥10 erg. While this result is independent of the geometry of the synchrotron-emitting region, the most likely origin is in a jet carrying away a significant amount of the available accretion power. 33

ALMACAL – VI. Molecular gas mass density across cosmic time via a blind search for intervening molecular absorbers

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 490:1 (2019) 1220-1230

Authors:

Anne Klitsch, Celine Peroux, Martin A Zwaan, Ian Smail, Dylan Nelson, Gergo Popping, Chian-Chou Chen, Benedikt Diemer, RJ Ivison, James R Allison, Sebastien Muller, A Mark Swinbank, Aleksandra Hamanowicz, Andrew D Biggs, Rajeshwari Dutta

Abstract:

We are just starting to understand the physical processes driving the dramatic change in cosmic star formation rate between z ∼ 2 and the present day. A quantity directly linked to star formation is the molecular gas density, which should be measured through independent methods to explore variations due to cosmic variance and systematic uncertainties. We use intervening CO absorption lines in the spectra of mm-bright background sources to provide a census of the molecular gas mass density of the Universe. The data used in this work are taken from ALMACAL, a wide and deep survey utilizing the ALMA calibrator archive. While we report multiple Galactic absorption lines and one intrinsic absorber, no extragalactic intervening molecular absorbers are detected. However, due to the large redshift path surveyed (z = 182), we provide constraints on the molecular column density distribution function beyond z ∼ 0. In addition, we probe column densities of N(H2) > 1016 atoms cm−2, 5 orders of magnitude lower than in previous studies. We use the cosmological hydrodynamical simulation IllustrisTNG to show that our upper limits of ρ(H2) 108.3 M Mpc−3 at 0 < z ≤ 1.7 already provide new constraints on current theoretical predictions of the cold molecular phase of the gas. These results are in agreement with recent CO emission-line surveys and are complementary to those studies. The combined constraints indicate that the present decrease of the cosmic star formation rate history is consistent with an increasing depletion of molecular gas in galaxies compared to z ∼ 2.

Late-outburst radio flaring in SS Cyg and evidence for a powerful kinetic output channel in cataclysmic variables

(2019)

Authors:

Rob Fender, Joe Bright, Kunal Mooley, James Miller-Jones

Inflation of 430-parsec bipolar radio bubbles in the Galactic Centre by an energetic event

Nature Nature Research 573:7773 (2019) 235-237

Authors:

Ian Heywood, F Camilo, WD Cotton, F Yusef-Zadeh, TD Abbott, RM Adam, MA Aldera, EF Bauermeister, RS Booth, AG Botha, DH Botha, LRS Brederode, ZB Brits, SJ Buchner, JP Burger, JM Chalmers, T Cheetham, D de Villiers, MA Dikgale-Mahlakoana, LJ du Toit, SWP Esterhuyse, BL Fanaroff, AR Foley, DJ Fourie, RRG Gamatham, S Goedhart, S Gounden, MJ Hlakola, CJ Hoek, A Hokwana, DM Horn, JMG Horrell, B Hugo, AR Isaacson, JL Jonas, JDBL Jordaan, AF Joubert, GIG Józsa, RPM Julie, FB Kapp, JS Kenyon, PPA Kotzé, H Kriel, TW Kusel, R Lehmensiek, D Liebenberg, A Loots, Rt Lord, Bm Lunsky, Ps Macfarlane

Abstract:

The Galactic Centre contains a supermassive black hole with a mass of four million Suns1 within an environment that differs markedly from that of the Galactic disk. Although the black hole is essentially quiescent in the broader context of active galactic nuclei, X-ray observations have provided evidence for energetic outbursts from its surroundings2. Also, although the levels of star formation in the Galactic Centre have been approximately constant over the past few hundred million years, there is evidence of increased short-duration bursts3, strongly influenced by the interaction of the black hole with the enhanced gas density present within the ring-like central molecular zone4 at Galactic longitude |l| < 0.7 degrees and latitude |b| < 0.2 degrees. The inner 200-parsec region is characterized by large amounts of warm molecular gas5, a high cosmic-ray ionization rate6, unusual gas chemistry, enhanced synchrotron emission7,8, and a multitude of radio-emitting magnetized filaments9, the origin of which has not been established. Here we report radio imaging that reveals a bipolar bubble structure, with an overall span of 1 degree by 3 degrees (140 parsecs × 430 parsecs), extending above and below the Galactic plane and apparently associated with the Galactic Centre. The structure is edge-brightened and bounded, with symmetry implying creation by an energetic event in the Galactic Centre. We estimate the age of the bubbles to be a few million years, with a total energy of 7 × 1052 ergs. We postulate that the progenitor event was a major contributor to the increased cosmic-ray density in the Galactic Centre, and is in turn the principal source of the relativistic particles required to power the synchrotron emission of the radio filaments within and in the vicinity of the bubble cavities.

Nine-hour X-ray quasi-periodic eruptions from a low-mass black hole galactic nucleus

Nature Nature Research 573 (2019) 381-384

Authors:

G Miniutti, Rd Saxton, M Giustini, Kd Alexander, Rp Fender, I Heywood, I Monageng, M Coriat, Ak Tzioumis, Am Read, C Knigge, P Gandhi, Ml Pretorius, B Agís-González

Abstract:

In the past two decades, high-amplitude electromagnetic outbursts have been detected from dormant galaxies and often attributed to the tidal disruption of a star by the central black hole1,2. X-ray emission from the Seyfert 2 galaxy GSN 069 (2MASX J01190869-3411305) at a redshift of z = 0.018 was first detected in July 2010 and implies an X-ray brightening by a factor of more than 240 over ROSAT observations performed 16 years earlier3,4. The emission has smoothly decayed over time since 2010, possibly indicating a long-lived tidal disruption event5. The X-ray spectrum is ultra-soft and can be described by accretion disk emission with luminosity proportional to the fourth power of the disk temperature during long-term evolution. Here we report observations of quasi-periodic X-ray eruptions from the nucleus of GSN 069 over the course of 54 days, from December 2018 onwards. During these eruptions, the X-ray count rate increases by up to two orders of magnitude with an event duration of just over an hour and a recurrence time of about nine hours. These eruptions are associated with fast spectral transitions between a cold and a warm phase in the accretion flow around a low-mass black hole (of approximately 4 × 105 solar masses) with peak X-ray luminosity of about 5 × 1042 erg per second. The warm phase has kT (where T is the temperature and k is the Boltzmann constant) of about 120 electronvolts, reminiscent of the typical soft-X-ray excess, an almost universal thermal-like feature in the X-ray spectra of luminous active nuclei6,7,8. If the observed properties are not unique to GSN 069, and assuming standard scaling of timescales with black hole mass and accretion properties, typical active galactic nuclei with higher-mass black holes can be expected to exhibit high-amplitude optical to X-ray variability on timescales as short as months or years9.