Radio observations of the Black Hole X-ray Binary EXO 1846-031 re-awakening from a 34-year slumber
D. R. A. Williams (1, 2), S. E. Motta (2, 3), R. Fender (2 and, 4), J. C. A. Miller-Jones (5), J. Neilsen (6), J. R. Allison (7), J. Bright, (2, 8), I. Heywood (2, 9), P. F. L. Jacob (2), L. Rhodes (2, 10), E., Tremou (11), P. Woudt (4), J. van den Eijnden (2), F. Carotenuto (2)

TL;DR
This paper reports multi-wavelength radio and X-ray observations of the 2019 outburst of the candidate black hole X-ray binary EXO 1846-031, revealing its outburst behavior, jet properties, and distance estimates.
Contribution
First detailed radio and X-ray monitoring of EXO 1846-031 during outburst, including high-resolution imaging and jet speed constraints, providing insights into its nature and behavior.
Findings
Radio and X-ray light curves show correlated peaks and outburst evolution.
Estimated minimum energy of radio flares is on the order of 10^41-10^42 erg.
Likely a radio-quiet black hole at approximately 4.5 kpc distance.
Abstract
We present radio [1.3 GHz MeerKAT, 4-8 GHz Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) and 15.5 GHz Arcminute Microkelvin Imager Large Array (AMI-LA)] and X-ray (Swift and MAXI) data from the 2019 outburst of the candidate Black Hole X-ray Binary (BHXB) EXO 1846-031. We compute a Hardness-Intensity diagram, which shows the characteristic q-shaped hysteresis of BHXBs in outburst. EXO 1846-031 was monitored weekly with MeerKAT and approximately daily with AMI-LA. The VLA observations provide sub-arcsecond-resolution images at key points in the outburst, showing moving radio components. The radio and X-ray light curves broadly follow each other, showing a peak on ~MJD 58702, followed by a short decline before a second peak between ~MJD 58731-58739. We estimate the minimum energy of these radio flares from equipartition, calculating values of 410 and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
