Bibcode
Russell, D. M.; Maitra, D.; Dunn, R. J. H.; Markoff, S.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 405, Issue 3, pp. 1759-1769.
Advertised on:
7
2010
Citations
104
Refereed citations
91
Description
The black hole X-ray binary XTE J1550-564 was monitored extensively at
X-ray, optical and infrared wavelengths throughout its outburst in 2000.
We show that it is possible to separate the optical/near-infrared (OIR)
jet emission from the OIR disc emission. Focussing on the jet component,
we find that as the source fades in the X-ray hard state, the OIR jet
emission has a spectral index consistent with optically thin synchrotron
emission (α ~ -0.6 to -0.7, where Fν ~
να). This jet emission is tightly and linearly
correlated with the X-ray flux; suggesting a common origin. This is
supported by the OIR, X-ray and OIR to X-ray spectral indices being
consistent with a single power law (α = -0.73). Ostensibly the
compact synchrotron jet could therefore account for ~100per cent of the
X-ray flux at low luminosities in the hard state. At the same time, (i)
an excess is seen over the exponential decay of the X-ray flux at the
point in which the jet would start to dominate, (ii) the X-ray spectrum
slightly softens, which seems to be due to a high-energy cut-off or
break shifting to a lower energy and (iii) the X-ray rms variability
increases. This may be the strongest evidence to date of synchrotron
emission from the compact, steady jet dominating the X-ray flux of an
X-ray binary. For XTE J1550-564, this is likely to occur within the
luminosity range ~(2 × 10-4-2 × 10-3)
LEdd on the hard-state decline of this outburst. However, on
the hard-state rise of the outburst and initially on the hard-state
decline, the synchrotron jet can only provide a small fraction (~ a few
per cent) of the X-ray flux. Both thermal Comptonization and the
synchrotron jet can therefore produce the hard X-ray power law in
accreting black holes. In addition, we report a phenomenological change
in the OIR spectral index of the compact jet from possibly a thermal
distribution of particles to one typical of optically thin synchrotron
emission, as the jet increases in energy over these ~20d. Once the
steady jet is fully formed and the infrared and X-ray fluxes are
linearly correlated, the spectral index does not vary (maintaining
α = -0.7) while the luminosity decreases by a factor of 10. These
quantitative results provide unique insights into the physics of the
relativistic jet acceleration process.