MAXI J1820+070 (optical counterpart ASASSN-18ey) is a black hole candidate discovered through its recent very bright outburst. The low extinction column and long duration at high flux allow detailed measurements of the accretion process to be made. In this work, we compare the evolution of X-ray spectral and timing properties through the initial hard state of the outburst. We show that the inner accretion disc, as measured by relativistic reflection, remains steady throughout this period of the outburst. Nevertheless, subtle spectral variability is observed, which is well explained by a change in coronal geometry. However, characteristic features of the temporal variability -lowfrequency roll-over and QPO frequency -increase drastically in frequency, as the outburst proceeds. This suggests that the variability timescales are governed by coronal conditions rather than solely by the inner disc radius. We also find a strong correlation between X-ray luminosity and coronal temperature. This can be explained by electron pair production with a changing effective radius and a non-thermal electron fraction of ∼ 20%.
Relativistic plasma jets are observed in many accreting black holes. According to theory, coiled magnetic fields close to the black hole accelerate and collimate the plasma, leading to a jet being launched 1-3 . Isolating emission from this acceleration and collimation zone is key to measuring its size and understanding jet formation physics. But this is challenging because emission from the jet base cannot be easily disentangled from other accreting components. Here, we show that rapid optical flux variations from a Galactic black--hole binary are delayed with respect to X--rays radiated from close to the black hole by ~0.1 seconds, and that this delayed signal appears together with a brightening radio jet. The origin of these sub--second optical variations has hitherto been controversial 4-8 . Not only does our work strongly support a jet origin for the optical variations, it also sets a characteristic elevation of ≲10 3 Schwarzschild radii for the main inner optical emission zone above the black hole 9 , constraining both internal shock 10 and magnetohydrodynamic 11 models. Similarities with blazars 12,13 suggest that jet structure and launching physics could potentially be unified under mass--invariant models. Two of the best--studied jetted black hole binaries show very similar optical lags 8,14,15 , so this size scale may be a defining feature of such systems. In June 2015, the Galactic X--ray binary V404 Cygni underwent the brightest outburst of an X-ray binary so far this century. We coordinated simultaneous optical observations from the William Herschel Telescope with X--ray observations from the NuSTAR space observatory on the morning of June 25. These were high frame--rate optical observations taken by the ULTRACAM instrument, sampling timescales down to 35.94 milliseconds (ms). Both optical and X--ray light curves show variability on a broad range of timescales characteristic of this source 15,16 (Fig. 1). The AMI telescope provided contiguous radio coverage throughout this period. Details of the observations may be found in Methods. These coordinated observations occurred on June 25, the day preceding the peak of the 2015 outburst. When the optical observations began, the X--ray intensity was two orders of magnitude below peak, and the spectrum was dominated by low--energy X--rays (i.e., it was in a state characterised as being relatively 'soft'). Steady, compact jet activity is not expected in such a state, and consistent with this, the radio spectral index is negative, as is typical of emission from discrete optically--thin ejecta. NuSTAR observations were interrupted about 2000 seconds later due to a period of Earth occultation, which separates the two halves (hereafter, 'epochs') of the sequence under consideration. At some point during this occultation, the source underwent a dramatic and very rapid change in its X--ray spectral state. When NuSTAR emerged from Earth occultation, the spectrum was instead found to have pivoted towards high energies, with a larger fraction of X--ray counts above 1...
The recurring transient outbursts in low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) provide us with strong test-beds for constraining the poorly understood accretion process. While impossible to image directly, phase-resolved spectroscopy can provide a powerful diagnostic to study their highly complex, time-dependent accretion discs. We present an 8-month long multi-wavelength (UV, optical, X-ray) monitoring campaign of the new candidate black hole LMXB MAXI J0637−430 throughout its 2019/2020 outburst, using the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, as well as three quasi-simultaneous epochs of Gemini/GMOS optical spectroscopy. We find evidence for the existence of a correlation between the X-ray irradiation heating the accretion disc and the evolution of the He ii 4686 Å emission line profiles detected in the optical spectra. Our results demonstrate a connection between the line emitting regions and physical properties of the X-ray irradiation heating the discs during outburst cycles of LMXBs. Further, we are able to show that changes in the physical properties of the irradiation heating the disc in outburst can be imprinted within the H/He emission line profiles themselves in these systems.
We present observations of rapid (sub-second) optical flux variability in V404 Cyg during its 2015 June outburst. Simultaneous three-band observations with the ULTRACAM fast imager on four nights show steep power spectra dominated by slow variations on ∼ 100-1000 s timescales. Near the peak of the outburst on June 26, a dramatic change occurs and additional, persistent sub-second optical flaring appears close in time to giant radio and X-ray flaring. The flares reach peak optical luminosities of ∼ few × 10 36 erg s −1 . Some are unresolved down to a time resolution of 24 milliseconds. Whereas the fast flares are stronger in the red, the slow variations are bluer when brighter. The redder slopes, emitted power, and characteristic timescales of the fast flares can be explained as optically-thin synchrotron emission from a compact jet arising on size scales ∼140-500 Gravitational radii (with a possible additional contribution by a thermal particle distribution). The origin of the slower variations is unclear. The optical continuum spectral slopes are strongly affected by dereddening uncertainties and contamination by strong Hα emission, but the variations of these slopes follow relatively stable loci as a function of flux. Cross-correlating the slow variations between the different bands shows asymmetries on all nights consistent with a small red skew (i.e., red lag). X-ray reprocessing and non-thermal emission could both contribute to these. These data reveal a complex mix of components over five decades in timescale during the outburst.
On 2015 June 15 the burst alert telescope (BAT) on board Swift detected an X-ray outburst from the black hole transient V404 Cyg. We monitored V404 Cyg for the last 10 years with the 2-m Faulkes Telescope North in three optical bands (V, R, and i ′ ). We found that, one week prior to this outburst, the optical flux was 0.1-0.3 mag brighter than the quiescent orbital modulation, implying an optical precursor to the X-ray outburst. There is also a hint of a gradual optical decay (years) followed by a rise lasting two months prior to the outburst. We fortuitously obtained an optical spectrum of V404 Cyg 13 hours before the BAT trigger. This too was brighter (∼ 1 mag) than quiescence, and showed spectral lines typical of an accretion disk, with characteristic absorption features of the donor being much weaker. No He II emission was detected, which would have been expected had the X-ray flux been substantially brightening. This, combined with the presence of intense Hα emission, about 7 times the quiescent level, suggests that the disk entered the hot, outburst state before the X-ray outburst began. We propose that the outburst is produced by a viscous-thermal instability triggered close to the inner edge of a truncated disk. An X-ray delay of a week is consistent with the time needed to refill the inner region and hence move the inner edge of the disk inwards, allowing matter to reach the central BH, finally turning on the X-ray emission.
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