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Published October 10, 2011 | Published
Journal Article Open

A Variable Mid-infrared Synchrotron Break Associated with the Compact Jet in GX 339-4

Abstract

Many X-ray binaries remain undetected in the mid-infrared, a regime where emission from their compact jets is likely to dominate. Here, we report the detection of the black hole binary GX 339-4 with the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) during a very bright, hard accretion state in 2010. Combined with a rich contemporaneous multiwavelength data set, clear spectral curvature is found in the infrared, associated with the peak flux density expected from the compact jet. An optically thin slope of ~ –0.7 and a jet radiative power of >6 × 10^(35) erg s^(–1) (d/8 kpc)^2 are measured. A ~24 hr WISE light curve shows dramatic variations in mid-infrared spectral slope on timescales at least as short as the satellite orbital period ~95 minutes. There is also significant change during one pair of observations spaced by only 11 s. These variations imply that the spectral break associated with the transition from self-absorbed to optically thin jet synchrotron radiation must be varying across the full wavelength range of ~3-22 μm that WISE is sensitive to, and more. Based on four-band simultaneous mid-infrared detections, the break is constrained to frequencies of ≈4.6^(+3.5)_(–2.0) × 10^(13) Hz in at least two epochs of observation, consistent with a magnetic field B ≈ 1.5(± 0.8) × 10^4 G assuming a single-zone synchrotron emission region. The observed variability implies that either B or the size of the acceleration zone above the jet base is being modulated by factors of ~10 on relatively short timescales.

Additional Information

© 2011 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2011 August 5; accepted 2011 August 25; published 2011 September 20. WISE is a joint project of the University of California, Los Angeles, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)/California Institute of Technology (Caltech), funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Data for individual scans are from NEOWISE (e.g., Mainzer et al. 2011), a project of JPL/Caltech funded by NASA's Planetary Science Division. We thank the referee for a prompt report. Individual support acknowledgments are as follows. P.Ga. acknowledges JAXA International Top Young Fellowship, D.M.R. and S.M. acknowledge Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research Veni and Vidi Fellowship, respectively, J.M. acknowledges GDR PCHE (France), and P.C. acknowledgesEUMarieCurie Intra-European Fellowship 2009-237722. Swift/BAT transient monitor results and RXTE HEASARC archive data are used herein. The Faulkes Telescope South (FTS) is maintained and operated by Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope Network. We thank Rosa Doran of NUCLIO, Portugal for FTS observations as part of the EU-Hands on Universe initiative for school scientific education.

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