On the nature of the "radio quiet" black hole binaries

(2011)

Authors:

Paolo Soleri, Rob Fender

A global study of the behaviour of black hole X-ray binary discs

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 411:1 (2011) 337-348

Authors:

RJH Dunn, RP Fender, EG Körding, T Belloni, A Merloni

Abstract:

We investigate the behaviour of the accretion discs in the outbursts of the low-mass black hole X-ray binaries (BHXRBs), an overview of which we have presented previously. Almost all of the systems in which there are sufficient observations in the most-disc-dominated states show a variation in the disc luminosity with temperature close to This in turn implies that in these states, the disc radius, Rin, and the colour correction factor, fcol, are almost constant. Deviations away from the T4 law are observed at the beginning and end of the most-disc-dominated states, during the intermediate states. Although these could be explained by an inward motion of the accretion disc, they are more likely to be the result of an increase in the value of fcol as the disc fraction decreases. By comparing the expected and observed disc luminosities, we place approximate limits on the allowed distances and masses of the BHXRB system. In a number of cases, the measured distances and masses of the BHXRB system indicate that it is possible that the black hole may be spinning. © 2010 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2010 RAS.

A parametric physical model for the intracluster medium and its use in joint SZ/X‐ray analyses of galaxy clusters

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 410:1 (2011) 341-358

Authors:

James R Allison, Angela C Taylor, Michael E Jones, Steve Rawlings, Scott T Kay

A tool to separate optical/infrared disc and jet emission in X-ray transient outbursts: The colour-magnitude diagrams of XTE J1550-564

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 416:3 (2011) 2311-2317

Authors:

DM Russell, D Maitra, RJH Dunn, RP Fender

Abstract:

It is now established that thermal disc emission and non-thermal jet emission can both play a role at optical/infrared (OIR) wavelengths in X-ray transients. The spectra of the jet and disc components differ, as do their dependence on mass accretion properties. Here we demonstrate that the OIR colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) of the evolution of the X-ray transient XTE J1550-564 in outburst can be used to separate the disc from the jet. Monitoring in two wavebands is all that is required. This outburst in 2000 was well studied, and both disc and jet were known to contribute. During the outburst the data follow a well-defined path in the CMD, describing what would be expected from a heated single-temperature blackbody of approximately constant area, except when the data appear redder than this track. This is due to the non-thermal jet component which dominates the OIR moreso during hard X-ray states at high luminosities, and which is quenched in the soft state. The CMD therefore shows state-dependent hysteresis, in analogy with (but not identical to) the well-established X-ray hardness-intensity diagram of black hole transients. The blackbody originates in the X-ray illuminated, likely unwarped, outer accretion disc. We show that the CMD can be approximately reproduced by a model that assumes various correlations between X-ray, OIR disc and OIR jet fluxes. We find evidence for the OIR jet emission to be decoupled from the disc near the peak of the hard state. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.

A transient component in the pulse profile of PSRJ0738-4042

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 415:1 (2011) 251-256

Authors:

A Karastergiou, SJ Roberts, S Johnston, H Lee, P Weltevrede, M Kramer

Abstract:

One of the tenets of the radio pulsar observational picture is that the integrated pulse profiles are constant with time. This assumption underpins much of the fantastic science made possible via pulsar timing. Over the past few years, however, this assumption has come under question with a number of pulsars showing pulse shape changes on a range of time-scales. Here, we show the dramatic appearance of a bright component in the pulse profile of PSRJ0738-4042 (B0736-40). The component arises on the leading edge of the profile. It was not present in 2004 but strongly present in 2006 and all observations thereafter. A subsequent search through the literature shows that the additional component varies in flux density over time-scales of decades. We show that the polarization properties of the transient component are consistent with the picture of competing orthogonal polarization modes. Faced with the general problem of identifying and characterizing average profile changes, we outline and apply a statistical technique based on a hidden Markov model. The value of this technique is established through simulations and is shown to work successfully in the case of low signal-to-noise ratio profiles. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.