State-dependent signatures of jets and winds in the optical and infrared spectrum of the black hole transient GX 339-4
Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences (2025)
X-Ray and Optical Polarization Aligned with the Radio Jet Ejecta in GX 339–4
The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 978:2 (2025) l19
Rapid Mid-Infrared Spectral-Timing with JWST: I. GRS 1915+105 during a MIR–bright and X-ray–obscured state
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) (2025) staf036
Identification of the Optical Counterpart of the Fast X-Ray Transient EP240414a
The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 978:2 (2025) L21
Abstract:
Fast X-ray transients (FXTs) are extragalactic bursts of X-rays first identified in archival X-ray data and are now routinely discovered in real time by the Einstein Probe, which is continuously surveying the night sky in the soft (0.5–4 keV) X-ray regime. In this Letter, we report the discovery of the second optical counterpart (AT 2024gsa) to an FXT (EP 240414a). EP 240414a is located at a projected radial separation of 27 kpc from its likely host galaxy at z = 0.4018 ± 0.0010. The optical light curve of AT 2024gsa displays three distinct components. The initial decay from our first observation is followed by a rebrightening episode, displaying a rapid rise in luminosity to an absolute magnitude Mr ∼ −21 after two rest-frame days. While the early optical luminosity and decline rate are similar to those of luminous fast blue optical transients, the color temperature of AT 2024gsa is distinctly red and we show that the peak flux is inconsistent with a thermal origin. The third component peaks at Mi ∼ −19 at ≳16 rest-frame days post-FXT, and is compatible with an emerging supernova. We fit the riz-band data with a series of power laws and find that the decaying components are in agreement with gamma-ray burst afterglow models, and that the rebrightening may originate from refreshed shocks. By considering EP 240414a in context with all previously reported known-redshift FXT events, we propose that Einstein Probe FXT discoveries may predominantly result from (high-redshift) gamma-ray bursts, and thus appear to be distinct from the previously discovered lower-redshift, lower-luminosity population of FXTs.Peculiar radio-bright behaviour of the Galactic black hole transient 4U 1543-47 in the 2021-2023 outburst
(2025)