Formation and destruction of jets in X-ray binaries
N. D. Kylafis (University of Crete), I. Contopoulos (Academy of, Athens), D. Kazanas (NASA/GSFC), D. M. Christodoulou (University of, Massachusetts Lowell)

TL;DR
This paper explores how the Poynting-Robertson Cosmic Battery model explains the formation, destruction, and variability of jets in X-ray binaries, linking accretion disk states to jet behavior.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the PRCB model can consistently explain jet phenomenology in X-ray binaries based on accretion disk states.
Findings
PRCB efficiency correlates with jet formation and destruction
The disk-jet connection is naturally explained by PRCB
Good agreement between model predictions and observed jet behavior
Abstract
Neutron-star and black-hole X-ray binaries (XRBs) exhibit radio jets, whose properties depend on the X-ray spectral state and history of the source. In particular, black-hole XRBs emit compact, steady radio jets when they are in the so-called hard state, the jets become eruptive as the sources move toward the soft state, disappear in the soft state, and re-appear when the sources return to the hard state. On the other hand, jets from neutron-star X-ray binaries are typically weaker radio emitters than the black-hole ones at the same X-ray luminosity and in some cases radio emission is detected in the soft state. Significant phenomenology has been accumulated so far regarding the spectral states of neutron-star and black-hole XRBs, and there is general agreement about the type of the accretion disk around the compact object in the various spectral states. Our aim is to investigate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
