Bibcode
Russell, D. M.; Russell, T. D.; Miller-Jones, J. C. A.; O'Brien, K.; Soria, R.; Sivakoff, G. R.; Slaven-Blair, T.; Lewis, F.; Markoff, S.; Homan, J.; Altamirano, D.; Curran, P. A.; Rupen, M. P.; Belloni, T. M.; Cadolle Bel, M.; Casella, P.; Corbel, S.; Dhawan, V.; Fender, R. P.; Gallo, E.; Gandhi, P.; Heinz, S.; Körding, E. G.; Krimm, H. A.; Maitra, D.; Migliari, S.; Remillard, R. A.; Sarazin, C. L.; Shahbaz, T.; Tudose, V.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 768, Issue 2, article id. L35, 6 pp. (2013).
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5
2013
Citations
68
Refereed citations
61
Description
We report striking changes in the broadband spectrum of the compact jet
of the black hole transient MAXI J1836–194 over state transitions
during its discovery outburst in 2011. A fading of the optical-infrared
(IR) flux occurred as the source entered the hard-intermediate state,
followed by a brightening as it returned to the hard state. The
optical-IR spectrum was consistent with a power law from optically thin
synchrotron emission, except when the X-ray spectrum was softest. By
fitting the radio to optical spectra with a broken power law, we
constrain the frequency and flux of the optically thick/thin break in
the jet synchrotron spectrum. The break gradually shifted to higher
frequencies as the source hardened at X-ray energies, from
~1011 to ~4 × 1013 Hz. The radiative jet
luminosity integrated over the spectrum appeared to be greatest when the
source entered the hard state during the outburst decay (although this
is dependent on the high-energy cooling break, which is not seen
directly), even though the radio flux was fading at the time. The
physical process responsible for suppressing and reactivating the jet
(neither of which are instantaneous but occur on timescales of weeks) is
uncertain, but could arise from the varying inner accretion disk radius
regulating the fraction of accreting matter that is channeled into the
jet. This provides an unprecedented insight into the connection between
inflow and outflow, and has implications for the conditions required for
jets to be produced, and hence their launching process.
Based on observations collected at the European Southern Observatory,
Chile, under ESO Program IDs 087.D-0914 and 089.D-0970.
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