Are Low-Frequency Quasi-Periodic Oscillations seen in accretion flows the disk response to a jet instability?
Jonathan Ferreira, Gregoire Marcel, Pierre-Olivier Petrucci, Jerome, Rodriguez, Julien Malzac, Renaud Belmont, Maica Clavel, Gilles Henri,, Stephane Corbel, Mickael Coriat

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origin of low-frequency QPOs in black hole X-ray binaries, proposing a new jet instability model over traditional disk-based explanations, supported by a hybrid disk configuration consistent with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel scenario where LF QPOs are caused by jet instabilities, challenging existing models and aligning with observed phenomenology.
Findings
Existing models face theoretical issues in explaining LF QPOs.
A hybrid JED-SAD disk configuration successfully reproduces multi-wavelength observations.
Proposes jet instability as a plausible mechanism for LF QPOs and jet wobbling phenomena.
Abstract
Low Frequency Quasi-Periodic Oscillations or LF QPOs are ubiquitous in BH X-ray binaries and provide strong constraints on the accretion-ejection processes. Although several models have been proposed so far, none has been proven to reproduce all observational constraints and no consensus has emerged yet. We make the conjecture that disks are threaded by a large scale vertical magnetic field that splits it into two radial zones. In the inner Jet Emitting Disk (JED), a near equipartition field allows to drive powerful self-collimated jets, while beyond a transition radius, the disk magnetization is too low and a Standard Accretion Disk (SAD) is settled. In a series of papers, this hybrid JED-SAD disk configuration has been shown to successfully reproduce most multi-wavelength (radio and X-rays) observations, as well as the concurrence with the LFQPOs for the archetypal source GX 339-4. We…
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