Large Scale Cavities Surrounding Microquasars Inferred from Evolution of their Relativistic Jets
J. F. Hao, S. N. Zhang

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of relativistic jets from microquasars, revealing large-scale cavities in their surrounding environment and proposing a classification based on jet morphology and environmental scale.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of jet deceleration indicating cavities around microquasars and proposes a classification scheme based on environmental scales.
Findings
Detected significant jet deceleration indicating cavities.
Estimated cavity sizes and asymmetries in density and magnetic fields.
Suggested cavities are formed by jets or disk winds, providing environmental probes.
Abstract
The black hole X-ray transient XTE J1550-564 has undergone a strong outburst in 1998 and two relativistic X-ray jets have been detected years later with the X-ray observatory; the eastern jet was found previously to have decelerated after its first detection. Here we report a full analysis of the evolution of the western jet; significant deceleration is also detected in the western side. Our analysis indicates that there is a cavity outside the central source and the jets first traveled with constant velocity and then were slowed down by the interactions between the jets and the interstellar medium (ISM). The best fitted radius of the cavity is 0.31 pc on the eastern side and 0.44 pc on the western side, and the densities also show asymmetry, of 0.034 cm on the east to 0.12 cm on the west. The best fitted magnetic fields on both sides…
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