On the infrared coincidence: what is the jet contribution to the X-ray power law in GX 339-4?
David M. Russell (NYU Abu Dhabi)

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the jet contributes to the X-ray power law in GX 339-4, finding that in some cases the IR and X-ray spectra may share a common origin, but generally the X-ray emission is dominated by Comptonization.
Contribution
It provides multi-wavelength spectral analysis of GX 339-4, suggesting the jet may influence the X-ray emission and proposing a model including a spectral break for better fitting.
Findings
IR and X-ray spectral indices sometimes match, indicating a possible common origin.
The jet contribution sets a lower limit on X-ray flux, implying a high-energy cooling break.
Comptonization likely dominates the X-ray emission most of the time.
Abstract
The hard X-ray power law, prominent in the hard state in black hole X-ray binaries, is generally due to thermal Comptonization in the corona. Optically thin synchrotron emission from compact jets is commonly seen at infrared wavelengths in the hard state. The extent of this spectrum to higher energies remains uncertain. Here, a multi-wavelength study of GX 339-4 is presented. The IR to X-ray spectral index is measured and compared to the X-ray spectral index fitted separately. On some dates in which the jet dominates the IR emission, the X-ray power law and the IR to X-ray power law spectral indices are both in the range alpha = -0.7 +/- 0.2 (where F_nu ~ nu^alpha), i.e. photon index, Gamma = 1.7 +/- 0.2. This suggests they could be the same power law with the same origin, or that this is a coincidence. On other dates in the hard state, alpha_{IR-X} < alpha_{X}, ruling out a common…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
