Time Evolution and the Nature of the Near-Infrared Jets in GRS1915+105

Abstract

We observed the galactic microquasar GRS1915+105 in the K (2.2 μm) band on October 16 and 17, 1995 UTC using the COB infrared (IR) imager on the Kitt Peak National Observatory 2.1-m telescope with a 0.2-arcsec/pixel plate scale and under good ( 0.7-arcsec) seeing conditions. Using a neighboring star in the image frames to determine the point spread function (PSF), we PSF-subtract the images of GRS1915+105. We find no evidence of extended emission such as the apparent near-IR jets seen by Sams et al. (1996) in July, 1995. Simple modelling of the star + jet structure allows us to place an upper limit on any similar emission at that position of K>16.4 at the 95% confidence level, as compared to K=13.9 as seen by Sams et al. (1996). This lack of extended IR flux during continued hard X-ray flaring activity confirms the hypothesis that the extended IR emission arises from the superluminal radio-emitting jets rather than reprocessing of the X-ray emission on other structures around the compact central object. Given the large apparent velocity of the radio-emitting jets, by the time of our observations the Sams et al. feature would have moved >1 arcsec from GRS1915+105, and we can place a limit of K>17.7 (95% confidence level) on any infrared emission in this region. We can thus place an upper limit on the radiative timescale of the feature of τ < 25 days, which is consistent with synchrotron jet emission.

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