Radio-loudness in black hole transients: evidence for an inclination effect
S.E. Motta (University of Oxford), P. Casella (INAF, Osservatorio, Astronomico di Roma), R. Fender (University of Oxford)

TL;DR
This study suggests that the radio-loud or quiet nature of black hole X-ray binaries is influenced by their inclination angle, challenging previous assumptions of intrinsic source properties and impacting jet formation models.
Contribution
It provides evidence that inclination effects, rather than intrinsic differences, determine the radio-loudness of black hole transients, based on analysis of variability and radio data.
Findings
High-inclination sources tend to be radio-quiet.
Low-inclination sources are more often radio-loud.
Inclination correlates with the slope of the hard-line in X-ray variability.
Abstract
Accreting stellar-mass black holes appear to populate two branches in a radio:X-ray luminosity plane. We have investigated the X-ray variability properties of a large number of black hole low-mass X-ray binaries, with the aim of unveiling the physical reasons underlying the radio-loud/radio-quiet nature of these sources, in the context of the known accretion-ejection connection. A reconsideration of the available radio and X-ray data from a sample of black hole X-ray binaries confirms that being radio-quiet is the more normal mode of behaviour for black hole binaries. In the light of this we chose to test, once more, the hypothesis that radio loudness could be a consequence of the inclination of the X-ray binary. We compared the slope of the `hard-line' (an approximately linear correlation between X-ray count rate and rms variability, visible in the hard states of active black holes),…
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