SS433's accretion disc, wind and jets: before, during and after a major flare
Katherine Blundell, Linda Schmidtobreick, Sergei Trushkin

TL;DR
This study analyzes optical spectra of SS433 before, during, and after a major flare, revealing complex mass loss behaviors, accretion disc dynamics, and jet activity linked to a massive ejection event.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational insights into the accretion disc, wind, and jet interactions during a major flare, highlighting the link between jet speed, wind acceleration, and radio flares.
Findings
Accretion disc visible in H-alpha and HeI lines during flare
Jet launch speed increased from 500 to 700 km/s
Radio flare occurred two days after jet speed increase
Abstract
The Galactic microquasar SS433 occasionally exhibits a major flare when the intensity of its emission increases significantly and rapidly. We present an analysis of high-resolution, almost-nightly optical spectra obtained before, during and after a major flare, whose complex emission lines are deconstructed into single gaussians and demonstrate the different modes of mass loss in the SS433 system. During our monitoring, an initial period of quiescence was followed by increased activity which culminated in a radio flare. In the transition period the accretion disc of SS433 became visible in H-alpha and HeI emission lines and remained so until the observations were terminated; the line-of-sight velocity of the centre of the disc lines during this time behaved as though the binary orbit has significant eccentricity rather than being circular, consistent with three recent lines of evidence.…
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