Rapid Mid-Infrared Spectral-Timing with JWST. I. The prototypical black hole X-ray Binary GRS 1915+105 during a MIR-bright and X-ray-obscured state
P. Gandhi (Univ. Southampton), E.S. Borowski, J. Byrom, R.I. Hynes,, T.J. Maccarone, A.W. Shaw, O.K. Adegoke, D. Altamirano, M.C. Baglio, Y., Bhargava, C.T. Britt, D.A.H. Buckley, D.J.K. Buisson, P. Casella, N. Castro, Segura, P.A. Charles, J.M. Corral-Santana, V.S. Dhillon

TL;DR
This paper reports on mid-infrared spectral-timing observations of the black hole X-ray binary GRS 1915+105 using JWST, revealing emission line variability, potential accretion rate estimates, and insights into the system's wind and dust properties during a unique bright MIR state.
Contribution
First MIR spectral-timing measurements of GRS 1915+105 during an obscured state, demonstrating new capabilities for rapid variability studies in X-ray binaries with JWST.
Findings
Detected significant MIR emission line variability on ~1000 s timescales.
Observed a lag of emission lines consistent with light-travel or recombination timescales.
Indicated a moderate accretion rate and possible dust destruction during the observation.
Abstract
We present mid-infrared (MIR) spectral-timing measurements of the prototypical Galactic microquasar GRS 1915+105. The source was observed with the Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) onboard JWST in June 2023 at a MIR luminosity L(MIR)~10^{36} erg/s exceeding past IR levels by about a factor of 10. By contrast, the X-ray flux is much fainter than the historical average, in the source's now-persistent 'obscured' state. The MIRI low-resolution spectrum shows a plethora of emission lines, the strongest of which are consistent with recombination in the hydrogen Pfund (Pf) series and higher. Low amplitude (~1%) but highly significant peak-to-peak photometric variability is found on timescales of ~1,000 s. The brightest Pf(6-5) emission line lags the continuum. Though difficult to constrain accurately, this lag is commensurate with light-travel timescales across the outer accretion disc or with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Mechanics and Biomechanics Studies
