ss433 and other transients zsolt paragi (jive) presented at the resolving the sky conference,...
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SS433 and other transientsSS433 and other transientsZsolt Paragi (JIVE)Zsolt Paragi (JIVE)
Presented at the Resolving The Sky conference, Presented at the Resolving The Sky conference,
Manchester, 18-20 April 2012Manchester, 18-20 April 2012
Outline
• SS433, an introduction
• The radio jets on mas scales: compact jets and discrete ejecta
• SS433 and microquasars
• Microquasars/SS433 and AGN
• Other microquasars, transients and TeV sources with the ‘e-EVN’
SS433: the first Galactic radio-jet system
• Strong, H spectral lines (Stephenson, Sandaluek 1977)
• Eclipsing binary, V1343 Aql, mv=14 mg (Kholopov et al. 1981)
• Related radio and X-ray sources
• Spectral lines at unusual frequencies (Margon et al. 1979)
• Doppler-shifted Balmer and HeI lines (Fabian, Rees 1979, Milgrom 1979)
• “moving lines”, between -30000 and +50000 km/s, P~164 days (Margon 1979b)
RADIO
• MERLIN: elongated structure on 1” scales (Spencer 1979)
• ‘EVN’: compact VLBI structure, ~10 mas (Schilizzi et al. 1979)
• VLA: precessing beams (Hjellming, Johnston 1981)A dozen of Nature papers in 1979More than 2000 papers to dateHope to understand AGN through SS433
The binary stellar system:
• O, B, or WR normal star, about 10 M or larger
• Black hole or neutron star, Mcompact/M~0,25 (estimate)
• 41012 cm (0,27 AU) (Brinkmann, Kawai, Matsuok 1989)• 13.081 day orbital period (Kemp et al. 1986)
• dM/dt = 10-510-4 M /yr (van den Heuvel 1981)
• Lbol = 1039 1040 erg/s (e.g. Wagner 1986)
• LX = 1036 erg/s (Kotani et al. 1996)
• Lkin = 21039 erg/s (e.g. Watson et al. 1986)
Hjellming, Johnston (1986)
• inclination: i = 78,83 0,10 (Margon & Anderson 1989)
• precession cone half opening angle: = 19,85 0,17 (Margon & Anderson 1989)
• precession cone axis projected PA: = 100 2 (Hjellming & Johnston 1981):
• sense of precession: s = 1 (Hjellming & Johnston 1981)
• jet velocity: vjet = 0,2602 0,0013 c (Margon & Anderson 1989)
• precession period P164 = 162,5 0,03 day (Margon & Anderson 1989)
• precession phase = 0.0 at: t164 = JD 2443588,03 0,3 (Vermeulen 1989)
Hjellming, Johnston (1985)
Kinematic model parameters
Kinematic distance and Doppler beaming
• Wb, Ef, Jb only! MkII/MkIII• If v=0.26, d=5.00.3 kpc !• cf. HI d=3.6 kpc
Fejes (1986a)
• Unbeamed and beamedmodels; comparison withreal data suggests beaming Is observed as expected
Fejes (1986b)
István Fejes(1939-2011)
Vermeulen et al. (1993)
EVN 10-days monitoring at 5 GHz, 1987D = 5 kpc 0,001” = 5 AU
• elongated radio core• discrete ejecta (bright flares ~400 days)• brightening zone
Facts sheet (data: Ralph Spencer; RCV thesis)
1985 May, MkIII mode E, 14 MHz LCP, EVN: Ef, Jb, On, Mc, Wb14
1987 May/June, mode A, 56 MHz EVN+GBT 43m; MERLIN
1-pass only 13 minutesUsed whole EVN supply of tapes, weighing more than a tonne!Correlated at Bonn in several passes
The compact inner jets • Optically thin ejecta
• Flux ratio (core) @18cm as expected (beaming)
• Optically (partially) thick core jets:
• Synchrotron self-absorption, similar to AGN cores (Blandford & Königl 1979)
• In addition, anisotropic free-free absorption (cf. Stirling et al. 1997)
• Optical depth (Lobanov et al. 1998):
• Jet profile (cf. Hjellming and Johnston 1988)
Paragi et al. 1999
ne1.2×106 cm-3
VLBA
The equatorial outflow
*
Various epochs/frequencies show evidence for:• free-free absorption at the base of the counterjet• ionized outflow, roughly perpendicular to the jets• radio emission from equatorial outflow detected• synchrotron/thermal origins proposed (cf. Blundell et al. 2001)• but note high Tb!
VLBA 22 GHz, 16 June 1998
Global VLBI, 6 June 1998
Tb~108 K
SS433 radio polarization• Linear polarization is observed on ~100 mas – as scales (VLA, MERLIN), outside the inner depolarized zone (ionized gas in eq. outflow or in the jet)• B aligned with local velocity => continuous jet (Stirling et al. 2004)• B aligned with ballistic velocity => discrete ejecta (Miller-Jones et al. 2008)• Linear polarization not detected with VLBI yet (but Tudose et al. in prep.)
• Circular polarization is occasionally detected (ATCA; Fender et al. 2000)• Dedicated global VLBI experiment to look for CP origin: non-detection, but also WSRT data show no CP at that epoch (Paragi et al. 2004)
SS433 with CHANDRA
Migliari et al. (2002)
• Reheating of atomic nuclei in the extended X-ray jets• Evidence for very high Lorentz-factor inner flow? – as Fomalont et al. (2001) suggested for Sco X-1???• Extended emission in eq. flow as evidence for hot gas cannot be 100% confirmed, but may be real (Rob Fender, priv.comm.)
Galactic analogy of an alternative “AGN feedback” process?
• Does SS433 heat up ISM to 107-8 K?• Mass loss in equatorial wind may reach or even exceed the transfer rate to the jets (King et al. 1999, Paragi 2000)
• Ultrafast outflows observed in X-rays in 40% of a sample of 42 galaxies• Regulating BH grow as well as stripping gas from star-forming regions; would naturally explain MBH-Mbulge relation (Tombesi et al. 2012)
XMM/NASA
BHXRB state transitions: X-ray HID
Low/Hard state
High/Soft state
SIMS HIMS
Compact jet
Increasing Accretion rate, increasing Lx~Lr
Following e.g. Fender et al. (2004)
jet line (?)
jet suppresseddiscrete ejecta
SS433 as a microquasar• “compact jets”• quenched state• discrete ejecta• known distance, vjet, composition!
But• BH or neutron star?• continuously in “soft state”• LX very low while LR high• X-rays from thermal jet
Tudose et al. (2010)
Flaring SS433
• SS433 likely has similar accretion state changes to other BHXRBs, but it is hidden from us in the X-rays
• vjet is well known in SS433 from optical lines, but also from VLBI-only measurements of transient ejecta (Vermeulen 1989)
• but there may be a very high gamma inner flow (cf. “dark jet”, Miller-Jones et al. 2008)
• tempting to interpret more and more assymetric core-jets at higher frequencies with increasing deeper in the jet
But• low/high frequencies show discrete ejecta travel at the exact same speed, v=0.26c
• this also seem to contradict the idea that during outburst in BHXRB there is an increase of , leading to the shocks
Following up flaring microquasars with the “e-EVN” hasbecame routine procedure with triggered e-VLBI observations.
The Fundamental Plane of Black Hole Activity
Merloni et al. (2003); Falcke et al.(2003)Körding et al. (2006) etc.
• Scaling between BHXRB in the hard state and AGN
• Not all AGN classes fit
• SS433 is far brighter in radio than hard state BHXRB
• Some LLAGN samples have very similar outliers (e.g. de Gasperin et al. 2011)
• Why SS433 is so special???
Dubner et al. (1998) 0.5 deg..
1.4 GHz VLA
SS433
SS433-W50: a ULX plus radio nebula?
• SS433 accretion disk X-rayemission is scattered along the jets
• When viewed along the jets, SS433May be seen as a powerful ULX(Fabrika 2000)
Supercritical accretion disc funnel:
Feng & Soria (2011)
• A new example of BH powered ULX nebula is IC342 X-1(Cseh et al. 2012)
EU Commissioner Janez Potocnik unleashes the power of e-VLBI, 2006
JIVE momentsRichard with Queen's Commissioner in the Province of Drenthe, Relus ter Beek, official opening of the EVN correlator (1998)
Farewell party @JIVE,2002 December 17
How we imagined e-EVN follow-up ofhigh energy transients
A few examples…
Strongly decelerating jet in XTE J1752-223
Yang et al. (2010, 2011)Yang et al. (2010, 2011)
Radio core
• X-ray transient discovered by RXTE on 23 Oct. 2009; gradually evolved to soft state and produced radio flare
• Initial EVN/e-VLBI observations on 11 Feb. 2010 one component (A)
• VLBA follow-up showed proper motion with strong deceleration and a new component (B) that was initially thought to be the counter-jet.
• EVN observations in March showed another ejected component (C)
• After the source went back to the hard state two epochs VLBA observations detected the core in the system
• Core apparently had high variability
• After understanding source geometry, further analysed component B which showed high proper motion during the single experiment it was detected
MAXI J1659-152, the shortest orbital period BHXRB
Peak position
Compact jet interpretation
Flux density [mJy] Coreshift [mas]
X-ray lightcurve Hardness-Intensity
Co
re s
ize
[mas
]
Siz
e c
ha
ng
e [
mas
]
dcoreS12/13 dcore~1.8 rcore
Source size changes vs. flux density and core shiftare in agreement with thecompact jet model.
Some core quenching is observed, but no bright,discrete ejecta throughthe state transition.
Similar behaviour seenin Cyg X-1. (Rushton et al. 2012)
Not powerful enough toproduce strong shocksin the flow?
Paragi et al. (2011) Paragi et al. (in prep.)
• Point like, variable TeV source discovered by the HESS team (Aharonian et al. 2007; Acciari et al. 2009) • Variable counterparts in the X-rays and in the radio band(Hinton et al. 2009 and Skilton et al. 2009, respectively)
• Proposed counterpart is the massive B0pe star MWC 148, d~1.5 kpc; SED similar to LSI +61 303, but order of mag. fainter (Hinton et al. 2009)
• Swift/XRT: 3215d periodicity (Bongiorno et al. 2011) supports binary nature,but binarity with optical spectroscopy not confirmed yet
• X-ray outburst in Feb. 2011(Falcone et al. 2011)
•VERITAS and MAGIC reported increased activity at >200 GeV between 7-9 Feb. 2011.(Ong 2011; Mariotti 2011)
• e-EVN: first VLBI detection!
HESS J0632+057, -ray BH binary candidate
Moldon, Ribo & Paredes (2011), ATel #3180
• Radio emission within 20 AU of MWC 148: confirming optical counterpart andindicating a compact object in close orbit
• Tb>106 K – nonthermal radio emission
• Follow-up observations during the normal EVN session, 30 days later: extended structure seen ~20 AU off the first epoch position, size ~75 AU
e-EVN: -ray BH binary scenario confirmed
Moldon, Ribo & Paredes (2011), A&A 533, L7
Peak: 34050 Jy/bmTotal: 41090 Jy
Peak: 8114 Jy/bmTotal: 20040 Jy
A surprise from the Crab-nebula
VLA (NRAO) HST (NASA/ESA) Chandra (NASA)
Radio Optical X-rays
A gamma-ray flare detected by AGILE
Tavani et al. 2011, Science
AGILE lightcurve, 2010• A pulsar wind nebula: highly magnetized plasmaof relativistic particles collide with ISM
• Until now has thought to be very stable (at large)in the X-rays and -rays (standard candle)
• Early AGILE data showed a flare – calibration orinstrumental errors?
• September 2010 another flare (~4 days), later confirmed by Fermi
• Short duration small size, L ≤1016 cm
• Wisps, knots and the anvil feature knownto vary (days to months); interesting features, A in particular, marked to the right (HST/Chandra follow-up)
• Pulsar itself did not change – where is theflaring region and what is the mechanism?
HST Chandra
HST Chandra
The Crab-flare with the e-EVN
• e-EVN + 3 Merlin telescopes, 1.6 GHz observations on 5 Nov. 2010• Detected pulsar, C1 and C2 components plus extended emission• Bright optical knot HST-1 not detected • C1 0.50.3 mJy, ~0.2–0.6”; C2 0.40.2 mJy, ≤0.2”• SNR<4 for both, but simulations show that they are real
Lobanov et al. 2011, Astron. Astrophys 533, A10
Normal CLEAN,uv-tapered,restoring beam150 mas
Multi-resolutionCLEAN,uv-tapered,500 mas
The Crab-flare with the e-EVN
• e-EVN multi-scale image in contours, restored with 0.7” beam • C1, C2 significant offset from jet axis (jet collimation beyond C1???)• C1 close to (but not coincident with) knot A – related to –flare?• In this case the injection power generated the burst would be 0.2%
of the pulsar spin-down power
Lobanov et al. 2011, Astron. Astrophys. 533, A10
e-EVNHST
e-EVNChandra
To be continued...
Prof Richard Schilizzi