A Radio-Selected Black Hole X-ray Binary Candidate in the Milky Way Globular Cluster M62
Laura Chomiuk (Michigan State/NRAO), Jay Strader (Michigan State),, Thomas J. Maccarone (Texas Tech), James C. A. Miller-Jones (ICRAR-Curtin),, Craig Heinke (Alberta), Eva Noyola (UNAM), Anil C. Seth (Utah), Scott Ransom, (NRAO)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a candidate stellar-mass black hole in the Milky Way globular cluster M62, identified through radio and X-ray observations, with properties consistent with known black hole binaries.
Contribution
First detection of a black hole candidate in M62 using radio and X-ray data, supporting its classification as a stellar-mass black hole binary.
Findings
Detected a faint radio source with flat spectrum in M62's core.
Source coincides with an X-ray source and optical counterpart showing variability.
Properties align with established black hole radio--X-ray correlation.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a candidate stellar-mass black hole in the Milky Way globular cluster M62. We detected the black hole candidate, which we term M62-VLA1, in the core of the cluster using deep radio continuum imaging from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array. M62-VLA1 is a faint source, with a flux density of 18.7 +/- 1.9 microJy at 6.2 GHz and a flat radio spectrum (alpha=-0.24 +/- 0.42, for S_nu = nu^alpha). M62 is the second Milky Way cluster with a candidate stellar-mass black hole; unlike the two candidate black holes previously found in the cluster M22, M62-VLA1 is associated with a Chandra X-ray source, supporting its identification as a black hole X-ray binary. Measurements of its radio and X-ray luminosity, while not simultaneous, place M62-VLA1 squarely on the well-established radio--X-ray correlation for stellar-mass black holes. In archival Hubble Space Telescope…
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