Bibcode
Liu, Ji-Feng; Bai, Yu; Wang, Song; Justham, Stephen; Lu, You-Jun; Gu, Wei-Min; Liu, Qing-Zhong; di Stefano, Rosanne; Guo, Jin-Cheng; Cabrera-Lavers, A.; Álvarez, P.; Cao, Yi; Kulkarni, Shri
Bibliographical reference
Nature, Volume 528, Issue 7580, pp. 108-110 (2015).
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12
2015
Journal
Citations
39
Refereed citations
36
Description
The formation of relativistic jets by an accreting compact object is one
of the fundamental mysteries of astrophysics. Although the theory is
poorly understood, observations of relativistic jets from systems known
as microquasars (compact binary stars) have led to a well established
phenomenology. Relativistic jets are not expected to be produced by
sources with soft or supersoft X-ray spectra, although two such systems
are known to produce relatively low-velocity bipolar outflows. Here we
report the optical spectra of an ultraluminous supersoft X-ray source
(ULS) in the nearby galaxy M81 (M81 ULS-1; refs 9, 10). Unexpectedly,
the spectra show blueshifted, broad Hα emission lines,
characteristic of baryonic jets with relativistic speeds. These
time-variable emission lines have projected velocities of about 17 per
cent of the speed of light, and seem to be similar to those from the
prototype microquasar SS 433 (refs 11, 12). Such relativistic jets are
not expected to be launched from white dwarfs, and an origin from a
black hole or a neutron star is hard to reconcile with the persistence
of M81 ULS-1’s soft X-rays. Thus the unexpected presence of
relativistic jets in a ULS challenges canonical theories of jet
formation, but might be explained by a long-speculated, supercritically
accreting black hole with optically thick outflows.
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