Simultaneous multiwavelength observations of V404 Cygni during its 2015 June outburst decay strengthen the case for an extremely energetic jet-base
Dipankar Maitra (1), John F. Scarpaci (1), Victoria Grinberg (2), Mark, T. Reynolds (3), Sera Markoff (4), Thomas J. Maccarone (5), Robert I. Hynes, (6) ((1) Wheaton College, (2) ESA/ESTEC, (3) Univ. of Michigan, (4) Univ. of, Amsterdam, (5) Texas Tech. Univ.

TL;DR
This study presents simultaneous multiwavelength observations of V404 Cygni during its 2015 outburst decay, providing evidence for an extremely energetic and compact jet base close to the black hole.
Contribution
It offers new insights into the jet structure and emission mechanisms during the outburst, highlighting the jet's extreme energy and compactness.
Findings
Optical and X-ray emissions are strongly correlated with no delay.
The optical spectrum suggests a jet synchrotron break above V-band.
The jet base was extremely compact and energetic during the outburst.
Abstract
We present results of multiband optical photometry of the black hole X-ray binary system V404 Cygni obtained using Wheaton College Observatory's 0.3m telescope, along with strictly simultaneous INTEGRAL and Swift observations during 2015 June 25.15--26.33 UT, and 2015 June 27.10--27.34 UT. These observations were made during the 2015 June outburst of the source when it was going through an epoch of violent activity in all wavelengths ranging from radio to -rays. The multiwavelength variability timescale favors a compact emission region, most likely originating in a jet outflow, for both observing epochs presented in this work. The simultaneous INTEGRAL/Imager on Board the Integral Satellite (IBIS) 20--40 keV light curve obtained during the June 27 observing run correlates very strongly with the optical light curve, with no detectable delay between the optical bands as well as…
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