Literature DB >> 23235823

Bright radio emission from an ultraluminous stellar-mass microquasar in M 31.

Matthew J Middleton1, James C A Miller-Jones, Sera Markoff, Rob Fender, Martin Henze, Natasha Hurley-Walker, Anna M M Scaife, Timothy P Roberts, Dominic Walton, John Carpenter, Jean-Pierre Macquart, Geoffrey C Bower, Mark Gurwell, Wolfgang Pietsch, Frank Haberl, Jonathan Harris, Michael Daniel, Junayd Miah, Chris Done, John S Morgan, Hugh Dickinson, Phil Charles, Vadim Burwitz, Massimo Della Valle, Michael Freyberg, Jochen Greiner, Margarita Hernanz, Dieter H Hartmann, Despina Hatzidimitriou, Arno Riffeser, Gloria Sala, Stella Seitz, Pablo Reig, Arne Rau, Marina Orio, David Titterington, Keith Grainge.   

Abstract

A subset of ultraluminous X-ray sources (those with luminosities of less than 10(40) erg s(-1); ref. 1) are thought to be powered by the accretion of gas onto black holes with masses of ∼5-20M cicled dot, probably by means of an accretion disk. The X-ray and radio emission are coupled in such Galactic sources; the radio emission originates in a relativistic jet thought to be launched from the innermost regions near the black hole, with the most powerful emission occurring when the rate of infalling matter approaches a theoretical maximum (the Eddington limit). Only four such maximal sources are known in the Milky Way, and the absorption of soft X-rays in the interstellar medium hinders the determination of the causal sequence of events that leads to the ejection of the jet. Here we report radio and X-ray observations of a bright new X-ray source in the nearby galaxy M 31, whose peak luminosity exceeded 10(39) erg s(-1). The radio luminosity is extremely high and shows variability on a timescale of tens of minutes, arguing that the source is highly compact and powered by accretion close to the Eddington limit onto a black hole of stellar mass. Continued radio and X-ray monitoring of such sources should reveal the causal relationship between the accretion flow and the powerful jet emission.

Entities:  

Year:  2012        PMID: 23235823     DOI: 10.1038/nature11697

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  2 in total

1.  Puzzling accretion onto a black hole in the ultraluminous X-ray source M 101 ULX-1.

Authors:  Ji-Feng Liu; Joel N Bregman; Yu Bai; Stephen Justham; Paul Crowther
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2013-11-28       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  A mass of less than 15 solar masses for the black hole in an ultraluminous X-ray source.

Authors:  C Motch; M W Pakull; R Soria; F Grisé; G Pietrzyński
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2014-10-09       Impact factor: 49.962

  2 in total

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