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Dive into the research topics where D. M. Russell is active.

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Featured researches published by D. M. Russell.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

BlackCAT: A catalogue of stellar-mass black holes in X-ray transients

J. M. Corral-Santana; J. Casares; T. Muñoz-Darias; F. E. Bauer; I. G. Martínez-Pais; D. M. Russell

During the last ~50 years, the population of black hole candidates in X-ray binaries has increased considerably with 59 Galactic objects detected in transient low-mass X-ray binaries, plus a few in persistent systems (including ~5 extragalactic binaries). We collect near-infrared, optical and X-ray information spread over hundreds of references in order to study the population of black holes in X-ray transients as a whole. We present the most updated catalogue of black hole transients, which contains X-ray, optical and near-infrared observations together with their astrometric and dynamical properties. It provides new useful information in both statistical and observational parameters providing a thorough and complete overview of the black hole population in the Milky Way. Analysing the distances and spatial distribution of the observed systems, we estimate a total population of ~1300 Galactic black hole transients. This means that we have already discovered less than ~5% of the total Galactic distribution. The complete version of this catalogue will be continuously updated online and in the Virtual Observatory, including finding charts and data in other wavelengths.


Nature | 2005

A dark jet dominates the power output of the stellar black hole Cygnus X-1

Elena Gallo; R. P. Fender; Christian R. Kaiser; D. M. Russell; Raffaella Morganti; Tom Oosterloo; Sebastian Heinz

Black holes undergoing accretion are thought to emit the bulk of their power in the X-ray band by releasing the gravitational potential energy of the infalling matter. At the same time, they are capable of producing highly collimated jets of energy and particles flowing out of the system with relativistic velocities. Here we show that the 10-solar-mass (10M[circdot]) black hole in the X-ray binary Cygnus X-1 (refs 3–5) is surrounded by a large-scale (∼5 pc in diameter) ring-like structure that appears to be inflated by the inner radio jet. We estimate that in order to sustain the observed emission of the ring, the jet of Cygnus X-1 has to carry a kinetic power that can be as high as the bolometric X-ray luminosity of the binary system. This result may imply that low-luminosity stellar-mass black holes as a whole dissipate the bulk of the liberated accretion power in the form of ‘dark’, radiatively inefficient relativistic outflows, rather than locally in the X-ray-emitting inflow.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

Global optical/infrared–X-ray correlations in X-ray binaries: quantifying disc and jet contributions

D. M. Russell; R. P. Fender; Robert I. Hynes; C. Brocksopp; Jeroen Homan; P. G. Jonker; Michelle M. Buxton

The optical/near-infrared (OIR) region of the spectra of low-mass X-ray binaries appears to lie at the intersection of a variety of different emission processes. In this paper we present quasi-simultaneous OIR–X-ray observations of 33 XBs in an attempt to estimate the contributions of various emission processes in these sources, as a function of X-ray state and luminosity. A global correlation is found between OIR and X-ray luminosity for low-mass black hole candidate XBs (BHXBs) in the hard X-ray state, of the form LOIR / L 0.6 X . This correlation holds over 8 orders of magnitude in LX and includes data from BHXBs in quiescence and at large distances (LMC and M31). A similar correlation is found in low-mass neutron star XBs (NSXBs) in the hard state. For BHXBs in the soft state, all the near-infrared (NIR) and some of the optical emission is suppressed below the correlation, a behaviour indicative of the jet switching off/on in transition to/from the soft state. We compare these relations to theoretical models of a number of emission processes. We find that X-ray reprocessing in the disc and emission from the jets both predict a slope close to 0.6 for BHXBs, and both contribute to the OIR in BHXBs in the hard state, the jets producing � 90 percent of the NIR emission at high luminosities. X-ray reprocessing dominates the OIR in NSXBs in the hard state, with possible contributions from the jets (only at high luminosity) and the viscously heated disc. We also show that the optically thick jet spectrum of BHXBs extends to near the K-band. OIR spectral energy distributions of 15 BHXBs help us to confirm these interpretations. We present a prediction of the LOIR–LX behaviour of a BHXB outburst that enters the soft state, where the peak LOIR in the hard state rise is greater than in the hard state decline (the well known hysteretical behaviour). In addition, it is possible to estimate the X-ray, OIR and radio luminosity and the mass accretion rate in the hard state quasi-simultaneously, from observations of just one of these wavebands, since they are all linked through correlations. Finally, we have discovered that the nature of the compact object, the mass of the companion and the distance/reddening can be constrained by quasi-simultaneous OIR and X-ray luminosities.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

No evidence for black hole spin powering of jets in X-ray binaries

R. P. Fender; Elena Gallo; D. M. Russell

In this paper, we consider the reported measurements of black hole spin for black hole X-ray binaries and compare them against the measurements of jet power and speed across all accretion states in these systems. We find no evidence for any correlation between the properties of the jets and the reported spin measurements. These constraints are strongest in the hard X-ray state, which is associated with a continuous powerful jet. We are led to conclude that one or more of the following is correct: (i) the calculated jet power and speed measurements are wrong, (ii) the reported spin measurements are wrong and (iii) there is no strong dependence of the jet properties on the black hole spin. In addition to this lack of observational evidence for a relation between the black hole spin and jet properties in stellar mass black holes, we highlight the fact that there appear to be at least three different ways in which the jet power and/or radiative efficiency from a black hole X-ray binary may vary, two of which are certainly independent of spin because they occur in the same source on relatively short time-scales and the third which does not correlate with any reported measurements of black hole spin. We briefly discuss how these findings may impact upon interpretations of populations of active galactic nuclei in the context of black hole spin and merger history.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Evidence for a compact jet dominating the broad-band spectrum of the black hole accretor XTE J1550–564

D. M. Russell; Dipankar Maitra; R. J. H. Dunn; Sera Markoff

The black hole X-ray binary XTE J1550-564 was monitored extensively at X-ray, optical and infrared wavelengths throughout its outburst in 2000. We show that it is possible to separate the optical/near-infrared (OIR) jet emission from the OIR disc emission. Focussing on the jet component, we find that as the source fades in the X-ray hard state, the OIR jet emission has a spectral index consistent with optically thin synchrotron emission (alpha approximate to -0.6 to -0.7, where F-v proportional to v(alpha)). This jet emission is tightly and linearly correlated with the X-ray flux; L-OIR,L-jet proportional to L-X(0.98 +/- 0.08) suggesting a common origin. This is supported by the OIR, X-ray and OIR toX-ray spectral indices being consistent with a single power law (alpha=-0.73). Ostensibly the compact synchrotron jet could therefore account for similar to 100 per cent of the X-ray flux at low luminosities in the hard state. At the same time, (i) an excess is seen over the exponential decay of the X-ray flux at the point in which the jet would start to dominate, (ii) the X-ray spectrum slightly softens, which seems to be due to a high-energy cut-off or break shifting to a lower energy and (iii) the X-ray rms variability increases. This may be the strongest evidence to date of synchrotron emission from the compact, steady jet dominating the X-ray flux of an X-ray binary. For XTE J1550-564, this is likely to occur within the luminosity range similar to(2 x 10(-4)-2 x 10(-3)) L-Edd on the hard-state decline of this outburst. However, on the hardstate rise of the outburst and initially on the hard-state decline, the synchrotron jet can only provide a small fraction (similar to a few per cent) of the X-ray flux. Both thermal Comptonization and the synchrotron jet can therefore produce the hard X-ray power law in accreting black holes. In addition, we report a phenomenological change in the OIR spectral index of the compact jet from possibly a thermal distribution of particles to one typical of optically thin synchrotron emission, as the jet increases in energy over these similar to 20 d. Once the steady jet is fully formed and the infrared and X-ray fluxes are linearly correlated, the spectral index does not vary (maintaining alpha =-0.7) while the luminosity decreases by a factor of 10. These quantitative results provide unique insights into the physics of the relativistic jet acceleration process.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

A variable mid-infrared synchrotron break associated with the compact jet in GX 339-4

P. Gandhi; A. W. Blain; D. M. Russell; P. Casella; J. Malzac; S. Corbel; Paolo D'Avanzo; F. W. Lewis; Sera Markoff; M. Cadolle Bel; Paolo Goldoni; Stefanie Wachter; D. Khangulyan; A. Mainzer

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 dataset, 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 >6x10^{35} erg/s (d/8 kpc)^2 are measured. A ~24 h WISE light curve shows dramatic variations in mid-infrared spectral slope on timescales at least as short as the satellite orbital period ~95 mins. 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 microns that WISE is sensitive to, and more. Based on four-band simultaneous mid-infrared detections, the break lies at ~5x10^{13} Hz in at least two epochs of observation, consistent with a magnetic field B~1.5x10^4 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, are being modulated by factors of ~10 on relatively-short timescales.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Disc-jet coupling in the 2009 outburst of the black hole candidate H1743−322

J. C. A. Miller-Jones; Gregory R. Sivakoff; D. Altamirano; M. Coriat; S. Corbel; V. Dhawan; Hans A. Krimm; Ronald A. Remillard; Michael P. Rupen; D. M. Russell; R. P. Fender; Sebastian Heinz; Elmar Körding; Dipankar Maitra; Sera Markoff; Simone Migliari; Craig L. Sarazin; V. Tudose

We present an intensive radio and X-ray monitoring campaign on the 2009 outburst of the Galactic black hole candidate X-ray binary H1743−322. With the high angular resolution of the Very Long Baseline Array, we resolve the jet ejection event and measure the proper motions of the jet ejecta relative to the position of the compact core jets detected at the beginning of the outburst. This allows us to accurately couple the moment when the jet ejection event occurred with X-ray spectral and timing signatures. We find that X-ray timing signatures are the best diagnostic of the jet ejection event in this outburst, which occurred as the X-ray variability began to decrease and the Type C quasi-periodic oscillations disappeared from the X-ray power density spectrum. However, this sequence of events does not appear to be replicated in all black hole X-ray binary outbursts, even within an individual source. In our observations of H1743−322, the ejection was contemporaneous with a quenching of the radio emission, prior to the start of the major radio flare. This contradicts previous assumptions that the onset of the radio flare marks the moment of ejection. The jet speed appears to vary between outbursts, with a possible positive correlation with outburst luminosity. The compact core radio jet reactivated on transition to the hard intermediate state at the end of the outburst, and not when the source reached the low hard spectral state. Comparison with the known near-infrared behaviour of the compact jets suggests a gradual evolution of the compact jet power over a few days near the beginning and end of an outburst.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Observational constraints on the powering mechanism of transient relativistic jets

D. M. Russell; Elena Gallo; R. P. Fender

We revisit the paradigm of the dependency of jet power on black hole spin in accreting black hole systems. In a previous paper we showed that the luminosity of compact jets continuously launched due to accretion onto black holes in X-ray binaries (analogous to those that dominate the kinetic feedback from AGN) do not appear to correlate with reported black hole spin measurements. It is therefore unclear whether extraction of the black hole spin energy is the main driver powering compact jets from accreting black holes. Occasionally, black hole X-ray binaries produce discrete, transient (ballistic) jets for a brief time over accretion state changes. Here, we quantify the dependence of the power of these transient jets (adopting two methods to infer the jet power) on black hole spin, making use of all the available data in the current literature, which includes 12 BHs with both measured spin parameters and radio flares over the state transition. In several sources, regular, well-sampled radio monitoring has shown that the peak radio flux differs dramatically depending on the outburst (up to a factor of 1000) whereas the total power required to energise the flare may only differ by a factor ~< 4 between outbursts. The peak flux is determined by the total energy in the flare and the time over which it is radiated (which can vary considerably between outbursts). Using a Bayesian fitting routine we rule out a statistically significant positive correlation between transient jet power measured using these methods, and current estimates of black hole spin. Even when selecting subsamples of the data that disregard some methods of black hole spin measurement or jet power measurement, no correlation is found in all cases.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Fast infrared variability from a relativistic jet in GX 339−4

P. Casella; Thomas J. Maccarone; K. O'Brien; R. P. Fender; D. M. Russell; M. van der Klis; Asaf Pe'er; Dipankar Maitra; D. Altamirano; T. Belloni; G. Kanbach; M. Klein-Wolt; E. Mason; Paolo Soleri; Alexander Stefanescu; K. Wiersema; Rudy Wijnands

We present the discovery of fast infrared/X-ray correlated variability in the black hole transient GX 339-4. The source was observed with subsecond time resolution simultaneously with Very Large Telescope/Infrared Spectrometer And Array Camera and Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer/Proportional Counter Array in 2008 August, during its persistent low-flux highly variable hard state. The data show a strong correlated variability, with the infrared emission lagging the X-ray emission by 100 ms. The short time delay and the nearly symmetric cross-correlation function, together with the measured brightness temperature of similar to 2.5 x 10(6) K, indicate that the bright and highly variable infrared emission most likely comes from a jet near the black hole. Under standard assumptions about jet physics, the measured time delay can provide us a lower limit of Gamma > 2 for the Lorentz factor of the jet. This suggests that jets from stellar-mass black holes are at least mildly relativistic near their launching region. We discuss implications for future applications of this technique.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Jet spectral breaks in black hole X-ray binaries

D. M. Russell; Sera Markoff; P. Casella; A. G. Cantrell; Ritaban Chatterjee; R. P. Fender; Elena Gallo; P. Gandhi; Jeroen Homan; Dipankar Maitra; J. C. A. Miller-Jones; K. O’Brien; T. Shahbaz

In X-ray binaries, compact jets are known to commonly radiate at radio to infrared frequencies, whereas at optical to γ-ray energies, the contribution of the jet is debated. The total luminosity, and hence power of the jet, is critically dependent on the position of the break in its spectrum, between optically thick (self-absorbed) and optically thin synchrotron emission. This break, or turnover, has been reported in just one black hole X-ray binary (BHXB) thus far, GX 339−4, and inferred via spectral fitting in two others, A0620−00 and Cyg X−1. Here, we collect a wealth of multi-wavelength data from the outbursts of BHXBs during hard X-ray states, in order to search for jet breaks as yet unidentified in their spectral energy distributions. In particular, we report the direct detection of the jet break in the spectrum of V404 Cyg during its 1989 outburst, at νb = (1.8 ± 0.3) × 1014 Hz (1.7 ± 0.2 μm). We increase the number of BHXBs with measured jet breaks from three to eight. Jet breaks are found at frequencies spanning more than two orders of magnitude, from νb = (4.5 ± 0.8) × 1012 Hz for XTE J1118+480 during its 2005 outburst, to νb > 4.7 × 1014 Hz for V4641 Sgr in outburst. A positive correlation between jet break frequency and luminosity is expected theoretically; νb∝L∼ 0.5ν, jet if other parameters are constant. With constraints on the jet break in a total of 12 BHXBs including two quiescent systems, we find a large range of jet break frequencies at similar luminosities and no obvious global relation (but such a relation cannot be ruled out for individual sources). We speculate that different magnetic field strengths and/or different radii of the acceleration zone in the inner regions of the jet are likely to be responsible for the observed scatter between sources. There is evidence that the high-energy cooling break in the jet spectrum shifts from UV energies at LX ∼ 10−8LEdd (implying the jet may dominate the X-ray emission in quiescence) to X-ray energies at ∼10−3LEdd. Finally, we find that the jet break luminosity scales as Lν, jet∝L0.56 ± 0.05X (very similar to the radio-X-ray correlation), and radio-faint BHXBs have fainter jet breaks. In quiescence the jet break luminosity exceeds the X-ray luminosity.

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D. Altamirano

University of Southampton

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Sera Markoff

University of Amsterdam

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Sebastian Heinz

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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P. Gandhi

University of Southampton

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