ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We report on the formation and evolution of two large-scale, synchrotron-emitting jets from the black hole candidate H 1743-322 following its reactivation in 2003. In November 2003 after the end of its 2003 outburst, we noticed, in observations with the Australia Telescope Compact Array, the presence of a new and variable radio source about 4.6 to the East of H 1743-322, that was later found to move away from H 1743-322. In February 2004, we detected a radio source to the West of H 1743-322, symmetrically placed relative to the Eastern jet. In 2004, follow-up X-ray observations with {em Chandra} led to the discovery of X-ray emission associated with the two radio sources. This likely indicates that we are witnessing the interaction of relativistic jets from H 1743-322 with the interstellar medium causing in-situ particle acceleration. The spectral energy distribution of the jets during the decay phase is consistent with a classical synchrotron spectrum of a single electron distribution from radio up to X-rays, implying the production of very high energy ($>$ 10 TeV) particles in those jets. We discuss the jet kinematics, highlighting the presence of a significantly relativistic flow in H 1743-322 almost a year after the ejection event.
The bright X-ray transient H 1743-322 was observed daily by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) during most of its 8-month outburst in 2003. We present a detailed spectral analysis and a supporting timing analysis of all of these data, and we disc
Using black body and power-law photon counts of All Sky Monitor (ASM) in Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) satellite it has been established recently by us that there is a significant time lag between the infall timescales of two components in the T
We present the detection of type C quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO) along with upper harmonic at respective frequencies of $sim0.6$ Hz and $sim1.2$ Hz in the single AstroSat observation taken during the 2016 outburst of the low-mass black hole X-ray
X-ray disk winds are detected in spectrally soft, disk-dominated phases of stellar-mass black hole outbursts. In contrast, compact, steady, relativistic jets are detected in spectrally hard states that are dominated by non-thermal X-ray emission. Alt
We observed the bright phase of the 2003 outburst of the Galactic black hole candidate H 1743-322 in X-rays simultaneously with Chandra and RXTE on four occasions. The Chandra/HETGS spectra reveal narrow, variable (He-like) Fe XXV and (H-like) Fe XXV