Swift J1727.8-1613 has the Largest Resolved Continuous Jet Ever Seen in an X-ray Binary
Callan M. Wood, James C. A. Miller-Jones, Arash Bahramian, Steven J., Tingay, Steve Prabu, Thomas D. Russell, Pikky Atri, Francesco Carotenuto,, Diego Altamirano, Sara E. Motta, Lucas Hyland, Cormac Reynolds, Stuart, Weston, Rob Fender, Elmar K\"ording, Dipankar Maitra

TL;DR
This paper presents high-resolution radio images of Swift J1727.8-1613, revealing the largest and most resolved continuous jet ever observed in an X-ray binary, with detailed measurements of its structure and dynamics.
Contribution
The study provides the first high-angular-resolution images of a large, continuous jet in an X-ray binary, demonstrating the jet's extent and properties during an outburst.
Findings
The jet extends approximately 110 AU at 8.4 GHz.
The intrinsic jet speed is at least 0.27c.
A rapidly fading discrete jet knot was observed.
Abstract
Multi-wavelength polarimetry and radio observations of Swift J1727.8-1613 at the beginning of its recent 2023 outburst suggested the presence of a bright compact jet aligned in the north-south direction, which could not be confirmed without high angular resolution images. Using the Very Long Baseline Array and the Long Baseline Array, we imaged Swift J1727.8-1613, during the hard/hard-intermediate state, revealing a bright core and a large, two-sided, asymmetrical, resolved jet. The jet extends in the north-south direction, at a position angle of East of North. At 8.4 GHz, the entire resolved jet structure is AU long, with the southern approaching jet extending AU from the core, where is the distance to the source and is the inclination of the jet axis to the line of sight. These images…
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