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We report on an XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer observation of the black hole candidate and Galactic microquasar GRS 1758-258. The source entered a peculiar off/soft state in late February, 2001, in which the spectrum softened while the X-ray flux -- and the inferred mass accretion rate -- steadily decreased. We find no clear evidence for emission or absorption lines in the dispersed spectra, indicating that most of the observed soft flux is likely from an accretion disk and not from a cool plasma. The accretion disk strongly dominates the spectrum in this lower-luminosity state, and is only mildly recessed from the marginally stable orbit. These findings may be difficult to explain in terms of advection-dominated accretion flow, or ADAF models. We discuss these results within the context of ADAF models, simultaneous two-flow models, and observed correlations between hard X-ray flux and jet production.
The XMM-Newton X-ray observatory pointed the galactic black hole candidate and microquasar GRS 1758-258 in September 2000 for about 10 ks during a program devoted to the scan of the Galactic Center regions. Preliminary results from EPIC MOS camera da
The family links between radio galaxies and microquasars have been strongly strengthened thanks to a new common phenomenon: the presence of extended winged features. The first detection of such structures in a Galactic microquasar, recently reported
We present the spectral and timing evolution of the persistent black hole X-ray binary GRS 1758-258 based on almost 12 years of observations using the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer Proportional Counter Array. While the source was predominantly found in
The Galactic Center black hole candidate (BHC) GRS 1758-258 has been observed extensively within INTEGRALs Galactic Center Deep Exposure (GCDE) program in 2003 and 2004, while also being monitored with RXTE. We present quasi-simultaneous PCA, ISGRI,
We report the results of a deep search for the optical and near infrared counterpart of the microquasar source GRS1758-258. At least two possible candidate counterparts of the binary star companion have been recognized on the basis of astrometric coi