| Literature DB >> 26738590 |
Mariko Kimura1, Keisuke Isogai1, Taichi Kato1, Yoshihiro Ueda1, Satoshi Nakahira2, Megumi Shidatsu3, Teruaki Enoto1,4, Takafumi Hori1, Daisaku Nogami1, Colin Littlefield5, Ryoko Ishioka6, Ying-Tung Chen6, Sun-Kun King6, Chih-Yi Wen6, Shiang-Yu Wang6, Matthew J Lehner6,7,8, Megan E Schwamb6, Jen-Hung Wang6, Zhi-Wei Zhang6, Charles Alcock8, Tim Axelrod9, Federica B Bianco10, Yong-Ik Byun11, Wen-Ping Chen12, Kem H Cook6, Dae-Won Kim13, Typhoon Lee6, Stuart L Marshall14, Elena P Pavlenko15, Oksana I Antonyuk15, Kirill A Antonyuk15, Nikolai V Pit15, Aleksei A Sosnovskij15, Julia V Babina15, Aleksei V Baklanov15, Alexei S Pozanenko16,17, Elena D Mazaeva16, Sergei E Schmalz18, Inna V Reva19, Sergei P Belan15, Raguli Ya Inasaridze20, Namkhai Tungalag21, Alina A Volnova16, Igor E Molotov22, Enrique de Miguel23,24, Kiyoshi Kasai25, William L Stein26, Pavol A Dubovsky27, Seiichiro Kiyota28, Ian Miller29, Michael Richmond30, William Goff31, Maksim V Andreev32,33, Hiromitsu Takahashi34, Naoto Kojiguchi35, Yuki Sugiura35, Nao Takeda35, Eiji Yamada35, Katsura Matsumoto35, Nick James36, Roger D Pickard37,38, Tamás Tordai39, Yutaka Maeda40, Javier Ruiz41,42,43, Atsushi Miyashita44, Lewis M Cook45, Akira Imada46, Makoto Uemura47.
Abstract
How black holes accrete surrounding matter is a fundamental yet unsolved question in astrophysics. It is generally believed that matter is absorbed into black holes via accretion disks, the state of which depends primarily on the mass-accretion rate. When this rate approaches the critical rate (the Eddington limit), thermal instability is supposed to occur in the inner disk, causing repetitive patterns of large-amplitude X-ray variability (oscillations) on timescales of minutes to hours. In fact, such oscillations have been observed only in sources with a high mass-accretion rate, such as GRS 1915+105 (refs 2, 3). These large-amplitude, relatively slow timescale, phenomena are thought to have physical origins distinct from those of X-ray or optical variations with small amplitudes and fast timescales (less than about 10 seconds) often observed in other black-hole binaries-for example, XTE J1118+480 (ref. 4) and GX 339-4 (ref. 5). Here we report an extensive multi-colour optical photometric data set of V404 Cygni, an X-ray transient source containing a black hole of nine solar masses (and a companion star) at a distance of 2.4 kiloparsecs (ref. 8). Our data show that optical oscillations on timescales of 100 seconds to 2.5 hours can occur at mass-accretion rates more than ten times lower than previously thought. This suggests that the accretion rate is not the critical parameter for inducing inner-disk instabilities. Instead, we propose that a long orbital period is a key condition for these large-amplitude oscillations, because the outer part of the large disk in binaries with long orbital periods will have surface densities too low to maintain sustained mass accretion to the inner part of the disk. The lack of sustained accretion--not the actual rate--would then be the critical factor causing large-amplitude oscillations in long-period systems.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26738590 DOI: 10.1038/nature16452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962