The radio/X-ray domain of black hole X-ray binaries at the lowest radio luminosities
E. Gallo, J. C. A. Miller-Jones, D. M. Russell, P. G. Jonker, J., Homan, R. M. Plotkin, S. Markoff, B. P. Miller, S. Corbel, R. P. Fender

TL;DR
This study presents the lowest radio luminosity measurement for a black hole X-ray binary in quiescence, revealing a consistent non-linear radio/X-ray correlation across multiple systems and states.
Contribution
It provides new deep radio and X-ray observations of XTE J1118+480 at unprecedented low luminosities and analyzes a comprehensive dataset to refine the radio/X-ray correlation in black hole binaries.
Findings
XTE J1118+480 has the lowest radio luminosity measured for any accreting black hole.
A tight, non-linear radio/X-ray correlation is confirmed across multiple systems.
A linear regression yields a slope of approximately 0.61 in the radio/X-ray luminosity relation.
Abstract
[Abridged] We report on deep, coordinated radio and X-ray observations of the black hole X-ray binary XTE J1118+480 in quiescence. The source was observed with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array for a total of 17.5 hrs at 5.3 GHz, yielding a 4.8 \pm 1.4 microJy radio source at a position consistent with the binary system. At a distance of 1.7 kpc, this corresponds to an integrated radio luminosity between 4-8E+25 erg/s, depending on the spectral index. This is the lowest radio luminosity measured for any accreting black hole to date. Simultaneous observations with the Chandra X-ray Telescope detected XTE J1118+480 at 1.2E-14 erg/s/cm^2 (1-10 keV), corresponding to an Eddington ratio of ~4E-9 for a 7.5 solar mass black hole. Combining these new measurements with data from the 2005 and 2000 outbursts available in the literature, we find evidence for a relationship of the form…
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