Overview of an Extensive Multi-wavelength Study of GX 339-4 during the 2010 Outburst
M. Cadolle Bel, J. Rodriguez, P. D'Avanzo, D. M. Russell, J. Tomsick,, S. Corbel, F. Lewis, F. Rahoui, M. Buxton, P. Goldoni, E. Kuulkers

TL;DR
This extensive multi-wavelength study of GX 339-4 during its 2010 outburst provides detailed insights into the evolution of accretion and jet processes near a black hole, highlighting spectral state transitions and emission correlations.
Contribution
First comprehensive multi-wavelength analysis of GX 339-4's 2010 outburst, combining radio to gamma-ray data with phenomenological and physical modeling.
Findings
Source evolved from hard to soft spectral state.
Radio, NIR, optical emissions faded as the source softened.
Bolometric flux increased significantly during the outburst.
Abstract
The microquasar GX 339-4 experienced a new outburst in 2010: it was observed simultaneously at various wavelengths from radio up to soft gamma-rays. We focused on observations that are quasi-simultaneous with those made with the INTEGRAL and RXTE satellites: these were collected in 2010 March-April during our INTEGRAL Target of Opportunity program, and during some of the other INTEGRAL observing programs with GX 339-4 in the field-of-view. X-ray transients are extreme systems that often harbour a black hole, and are known to emit throughout the whole electromagnetic spectrum when in outburst. The goals of our program are to understand the evolution of the physical processes close to the black hole and to study the connections between the accretion and ejection. We analysed radio, NIR, optical, UV, X-ray and soft gamma-ray observations. We studied the source evolution in detail by…
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