A broadband radio view of transient jet ejecta in the black hole candidate X-ray binary MAXI J1535-571
J. Chauhan, J. C. A. Miller-Jones, G. E. Anderson, A. Paduano, M., Sokolowski, C. Flynn, P. J. Hancock, N. Hurley-Walker, D. L. Kaplan, T. D., Russell, A. Bahramian, S. W. Duchesne, D. Altamirano, S. Croft, H. A. Krimm,, G. R. Sivakoff, R. Soria, C. M. Trott, R. B. Wayth

TL;DR
This study uses broadband radio observations from multiple telescopes to analyze transient jets in the black hole candidate X-ray binary MAXI J1535-571, revealing physical jet properties and demonstrating the capabilities of current radio arrays.
Contribution
First broadband radio analysis of MAXI J1535-571's jets combining multiple telescopes, providing detailed physical parameters and showcasing the potential of the Australian radio telescope suite.
Findings
Detected radio spectrum turnover indicating synchrotron self-absorption
Measured jet knot size to be 34±1 mas
Estimated magnetic field strength of 104+80−78 mG
Abstract
We present a broadband radio study of the transient jets ejected from the black hole candidate X-ray binary MAXI J1535-571, which underwent a prolonged outburst beginning on 2 September 2017. We monitored MAXI J1535-571 with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) at frequencies from 119 to 186 MHz over six epochs from 20 September to 14 October 2017. The source was quasi-simultaneously observed over the frequency range 0.84-19 GHz by UTMOST (the upgraded Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope), the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder, the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), and the Australian Long Baseline Array (LBA). Using the LBA observations from 23 September 2017, we measured the source size to be mas. During the brightest radio flare on 21 September 2017, the source was detected down to 119 MHz by the MWA, and the radio spectrum indicates a turnover between…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
