Interactions among intermediate redshift galaxies

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 639 (2020) a30

Authors:

Persis Misquitta, Micah Bowles, Andreas Eckart, Madeleine Yttergren, Gerold Busch, Monica Valencia-S., Nastaran Fazeli

Relativistic X-ray jets from the black hole X-ray binary MAXI J1820+070

Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 895:2 (2020) L31

Authors:

Mathilde Espinasse, Stephane Corbel, Philip Kaaret, Evangelia Tremou, Giulia Migliori, Richard M Plotkin, Joe Bright, John Tomsick, Anastasios Tzioumis, Robert Fender, Jerome A Orosz, Elena Gallo, Jeroen Homan, Peter G Jonker, James CA Miller-Jones, David M Russell, Sara Motta

Abstract:

The black hole MAXI J1820+070 was discovered during its 2018 outburst and was extensively monitored across the electromagnetic spectrum. Following the detection of relativistic radio jets, we obtained four Chandra X-ray observations taken between 2018 November and 2019 June, along with radio observations conducted with the Very Large Array and MeerKAT arrays. We report the discovery of X-ray sources associated with the radio jets moving at relativistic velocities with a possible deceleration at late times. The broadband spectra of the jets are consistent with synchrotron radiation from particles accelerated up to very high energies (>10 TeV) by shocks produced by the jets interacting with the interstellar medium. The minimal internal energy estimated from the X-ray observations for the jets is ~10^41 erg, significantly larger than the energy calculated from the radio flare alone, suggesting most of the energy is possibly not radiated at small scales but released through late-time interactions.

Interactions among intermediate redshift galaxies. The case of SDSSJ134420.86+663717.8

ArXiv 2005.12888 (2020)

Authors:

Persis Misquitta, Micah Bowles, Andreas Eckart, Madeleine Yttergren, Gerold Busch, Monica Valencia-S, Nastaran Fazeli

An extremely powerful long-lived superluminal ejection from the black hole MAXI J1820+070

(2020)

Authors:

JS Bright, RP Fender, SE Motta, DRA Williams, J Moldon, RM Plotkin, JCA Miller-Jones, I Heywood, E Tremou, R Beswick, GR Sivakoff, S Corbel, DAH Buckley, J Homan, E Gallo, AJ Tetarenko, TD Russell, DA Green, D Titterington, PA Woudt, RP Armstrong, PJ Groot, A Horesh, AJ van der Horst, EG Körding, VA McBride, A Rowlinson, RAMJ Wijers

The 2018 outburst of BHXB H1743−322 as seen with MeerKAT

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 491:1 (2019) L28-L33

Authors:

David Williams, R Fender, J Bright, I Heywood, E Tremou, P Woudt, DAH Buckley, S Corbel, M Coriat, T Joseph, L Rhodes, GR Sivakoff, AJVD Horst

Abstract:

In recent years, the black hole candidate X-ray binary system H1743-322 has undergone outbursts and it has been observed with X-ray and radio telescopes. We present 1.3 GHz MeerKAT radio data from the ThunderKAT Large Survey Project on radio transients for the 2018 outburst of H1743-322. We obtain seven detections from a weekly monitoring programme and use publicly available Swift X-ray Telescope and MAXI data to investigate the radio/X-ray correlation of H1743-322 for this outburst. We compare the 2018 outburst with those reported in the literature for this system and find that the X-ray outburst reported is similar to previously reported 'hard-only' outbursts. As in previous outbursts, H1743-322 follows the 'radio-quiet' correlation in the radio/X-ray plane for black hole X-ray binaries, and the radio spectral index throughout the outburst is consistent with the 'radio-quiet' population.