Litcius/Paper detail

A unified accretion-ejection paradigm for black hole X-ray binaries

G. Marcel, F. Cangemi, J. Rodriguez, Joey Neilsen, Jonathan Ferreira, Pierre-Olivier Petrucci, J. Malzac, S. Barnier, M. Clavel

2020Astronomy and Astrophysics28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Context. We proposed in paper I that the spectral evolution of transient X-ray binaries (XrB) is due to an interplay between two flows: a standard accretion disk (SAD) in the outer parts and a jet-emitting disk (JED) in the inner parts. We showed in papers II, III, and IV that the spectral evolution in X-ray and radio during the 2010–2011 outburst of GX 339-4 can be recovered. However, the observed variability in X-ray was never addressed in this framework. Aims. We investigate the presence of low frequency quasi-periodic oscillations (LFQPOs) during an X-ray outburst, and address the possible correlation between the frequencies of these LFQPOs and the transition radius between the two flows, r J . Methods. We select X-ray and radio data that correspond to 3 outbursts of GX 339-4. We use the method detailed in Paper IV to obtain the best parameters r J ( t ) and ṁ in ( t ) for each outburst. We also independently search for X-ray QPOs in each selected spectra and compare the QPO frequency to the Kepler and epicyclic frequencies of the flow in r J . Results. We successfully reproduce the correlated evolution of the X-ray spectra and the radio emission for 3 different activity cycles of GX 339-4. We use a unique normalisation factor for the radio emission, f ∼ R . We also report the detection of 7 new LFQPOs (3 Type B, and 4 Type C), to go along with the ones previously reported in the literature. We show that the frequency of Type C QPOs can be linked to the dynamical JED-SAD transition radius r J , rather than to the optically thin-thick transition radius in the disk. The scaling factor q such that ν QPO ≃ ν K ( r J )/ q is q ≃ 70 − 130, a factor consistent during the 4 cycles, and similar to previous studies. Conclusions. The JED-SAD hybrid disk configuration not only provides a successful paradigm allowing us to describe XrB cycles, but also matches the evolution of QPO frequencies. Type C QPOs provide an indirect way to probe the JED-SAD transition radius, where an undetermined process produces secular variability. The demonstrated relation between the transition radius links Type C QPOs to the transition between two different flows, effectively tying it to the inner magnetized structure, i.e., the jets. This direct connection between the jets’ (accretion-ejection) structure and the process responsible for Type C QPOs, if confirmed, could naturally explain their puzzling multi-wavelength behavior.

Topics & Concepts

AstrophysicsPhysicsAccretion (finance)Context (archaeology)RADIUSSpectral lineAccretion discBlack hole (networking)X-rayAstronomyPaleontologyRouting protocolComputer networkRouting (electronic design automation)Computer securityQuantum mechanicsBiologyComputer scienceLink-state routing protocolAstrophysical Phenomena and ObservationsAstrophysics and Cosmic PhenomenaMechanics and Biomechanics Studies