The peculiar motions of early-type galaxies in two distant regions - VII. Peculiar velocities and bulk motions

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 321:2 (2001) 277-305

Authors:

M Colless, RP Saglia, D Burstein, RL Davies, RK McMahan, G Wegner

VLBA Observations of the Superluminal Radio Jet from Cygnus X-1 in the Low/Hard X-Ray State

Chapter in Microquasars, Springer Nature (2001) 121-122

Authors:

Chris De La Force, Ralph Spencer, A Stirling, M Garrett, R Fender

An aging study of double GEMs in Ar-CO2

IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference 1 (2000)

Authors:

J Miyamoto, I Shipsey

Abstract:

An aging study was performed using double OEMs and a printed circuit readout board (PCB) with an intense X-ray source in an ultra clean Argon-CO2 gas environment. The detector was irradiated continuously for about 1000 hours without interruption until a large amount of charge was accumulated. A single-wire chamber served as a monitoring device to check the beam and ambient conditions and gas chromatography was used to ensure no hydrocarbon materials were present in the gas mixture. The detector could withstand more than 25 mC/mm2 with only a slight sign of aging and the charge accumulated is presumably sufficient to conduct large-scale and long-term experiments in intense radiation fields.

Coupling of the X-ray and radio emission in the black hole candidate and compact jet source GX 339-4

Astronomy and Astrophysics 359:1 (2000) 251-268

Authors:

S Corbel, RP Fender, AK Tzioumis, M Nowak, V McIntyre, P Durouchoux, R Sood

Abstract:

We report the results of a long-term campaign of radio, soft- and hard- X-ray observations of the galactic black hole candidate GX 339-4. In the Low-Hard X-ray state the system displays a strong 3-way linear correlation between soft-and hard-X-rays and radio emission, implying a coupling between the Comptonising corona and a radio-emitting compact jet. In this state the radio emission is linearly polarised at a level of around 2%, with an almost constant polarisation angle, indicative of a favored axis in this system probably related to the compact jet and/or black hole spin axis. In the Off X-ray state the radio emission declines with the X-ray emission to below detectable levels, suggesting that it is simply a lower-luminosity version of the Low-Hard state. In the High-Soft state both the hard-X-ray and radio emission are suppressed. We also note that the transitions from the Low-Hard state to the High-Soft state (and the reverse) are possibly associated with discrete ejection(s) of expanding relativistic plasma.

Disk mass accretion rate and infrared flares in GRS 1915+105

Astronomy and Astrophysics 358:2 (2000)

Authors:

T Belloni, S Migliari, RP Fender

Abstract:

We have analyzed in detail a set of Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) observations of the galactic microquasar GRS 1915+105 corresponding to times when quasi-periodic oscillations in the infrared have been reported. From time-resolved spectral analysis, we have estimated the mass accretion rate through the (variable) inner edge of the accretion disk. We compare this accretion rate to an estimate of the mass/energy outflow rate in the jet. We discuss the possible implications of these results in terms of disk-instability and jet ejection, and in particular note an apparent anti-correlation between the accretion and ejection rates, implying that the gas expelled in the jet must leave the accretion disk before reaching its innermost radius.