Evidence for a compact jet dominating the broadband spectrum of the black hole accretor XTE J1550-564
D. M. Russell (1), D. Maitra (1,2), R. J. H. Dunn (3), S. Markoff (1), ((1) University of Amsterdam (2) University of Michigan (3) Excellence, Cluster Universe)

TL;DR
This study provides evidence that a compact synchrotron jet can dominate the broadband X-ray spectrum of the black hole binary XTE J1550-564 during its outburst decline, challenging traditional models of X-ray emission origins.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the optical/near-infrared jet emission can be separated from disc emission and may account for nearly all X-ray flux at low luminosities in the hard state.
Findings
OIR jet emission is consistent with optically thin synchrotron emission.
Jet emission correlates linearly with X-ray flux, suggesting a common origin.
Jet could dominate X-ray flux at low luminosities in the hard state.
Abstract
[abridged] The black hole X-ray binary XTE J1550-564 was monitored extensively at X-ray, optical and infrared wavelengths throughout its outburst in 2000. We show that it is possible to separate the optical/near-infrared (OIR) jet emission from the OIR disc emission. Focussing on the jet component, we find that as the source fades in the X-ray hard state, the OIR jet emission has a spectral index consistent with optically thin synchrotron emission (alpha ~ -0.6 to -0.7, where F_nu \propto nu^alpha). This jet emission is tightly and linearly correlated with the X-ray flux; L_OIR,jet \propto L_X^(0.98 +- 0.08) suggesting a common origin. This is supported by the OIR, X-ray and OIR to X-ray spectral indices being consistent with a single power law (alpha = -0.73). Ostensibly the compact, synchrotron jet could therefore account for ~ 100 % of the X-ray flux at low luminosities in the hard…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
