An Extreme X-ray Disk Wind in the Black Hole Candidate IGR J17091-3624
Ashley L. King, Jon M. Miller, John Raymond, Andy C. Fabian, Chris S., Reynolds, Tim R. Kallman, Dipankar Maitra, Edward M. Cackett, Michael P., Rupen

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of an extremely fast, highly ionized disk wind in the black hole candidate IGR J17091-3624, with velocities much higher than previously observed, challenging existing models of black hole accretion physics.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of a wind with velocities comparable to those in active galactic nuclei in a stellar-mass black hole, using Chandra spectroscopy and radio observations.
Findings
Detected a blue-shifted absorption line indicating a wind at 9300 km/s.
Suggested the wind originates within 43,300 Schwarzschild radii of the black hole.
Found jet activity was quenched during the wind observation.
Abstract
{\it Chandra} spectroscopy of transient stellar-mass black holes in outburst has clearly revealed accretion disk winds in soft, disk--dominated states, in apparent anti-correlation with relativistic jets in low/hard states. These disk winds are observed to be highly ionized, dense, and to have typical velocities of 1000 km/s or less projected along our line of sight. Here, we present an analysis of two {\it Chandra} High Energy Transmission Grating spectra of the Galactic black hole candidate IGR J170913624 and contemporaneous EVLA radio observations, obtained in 2011. The second {\it Chandra} observation reveals an absorption line at 6.910.01 keV; associating this line with He-like Fe XXV requires a blue-shift of km/s (0.03, or the escape velocity at 1000 R). This projected outflow velocity is an order of magnitude higher than has…
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