Radio/X-ray Correlation in the Mini-Outburts of Black Hole X-ray Transient GRS 1739--278
Abstract
We present quasi-simultaneous radio and X-ray observations of the black hole X-ray binary GRS 1739--278 of its 2015-2016 mini-outbursts, i.e. between 2015 June 10 and 2016 October 31, with the X-ray-to-radio time interval being less than one day. The monitor champaign was run by \, in the X-rays and by JVLA in the radio (at both 5 GHz and 8 GHz). We find the brightest radio emission is actually achieved during the soft sate, where radio spectrum is unexpectedly flat with a spectral index α≈ -0.2 (flux F α). For the radio emission in hard state, we also find a large diversity in the spectral index, i.e. a majority of radio spectra are optically thick with -0.5 < α < 0.5, while a few are optically thin with α < -1. We also investigate the correlation between the luminosities in radio (monochromatic at 5 GHz, LR) and 1-10 keV X-rays (LX) during the hard state. We find this source does not follow the standard correlation whose p≈ 0.6 (in the form of LR LXp), but instead belongs to the "outlier" category that may follow a hybrid correlation. For more than orders of magnitude variation in the X-ray luminosity this source exhibits a flat correlation with p≈ 0.16. Both the slope and the corresponding luminosity range agree well with those in H1743--322, the prototype of the hybrid correlation.
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