The Jet Paradigm: From Microquasars to Quasars
The discovery of the first case of superluminal radio jets in our galaxy in 1994 from the bright and peculiar X-ray source GRS 1915+105 has opened the way to a major shift in the direction of studies of stellar-mass accreting binaries. The past decade has seen an impressive increase in multi-wavelength studies. It is now known that all black hole binaries in our galaxy are radio sources and most likely their radio emission originates from a powerful jet. In addition to the spectacular events related to the ejection of superluminal jets, steady jets are known from many systems. Compared with their supermassive cousins, the nuclei of active galaxies, stellar-mass X-ray binaries have the advantage of varying on time scales accessible within a human life (sometimes even much shorter than a second). This has led to the first detailed studies of the relation between accretion and ejection. It is even possible that, excluding their “soft” periods, the majority of the power in gal- tic sources lies in the jets and not in the accretion flows. This means that until a few years ago we were struggling with a physical problem, accretion onto compact objects, without considering one of the most important components of the system. Models that associate part of the high-energy emission and even the fast aperiodic variability to the jet itself are now being proposed and jets can no longer be ignored.
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The Jet Paradigm: From Microquasars to Quasars
The discovery of the first case of superluminal radio jets in our galaxy in 1994 from the bright and peculiar X-ray source GRS 1915+105 has opened the way to a major shift in the direction of studies of stellar-mass accreting binaries. The past decade has seen an impressive increase in multi-wavelength studies. It is now known that all black hole binaries in our galaxy are radio sources and most likely their radio emission originates from a powerful jet. In addition to the spectacular events related to the ejection of superluminal jets, steady jets are known from many systems. Compared with their supermassive cousins, the nuclei of active galaxies, stellar-mass X-ray binaries have the advantage of varying on time scales accessible within a human life (sometimes even much shorter than a second). This has led to the first detailed studies of the relation between accretion and ejection. It is even possible that, excluding their “soft” periods, the majority of the power in gal- tic sources lies in the jets and not in the accretion flows. This means that until a few years ago we were struggling with a physical problem, accretion onto compact objects, without considering one of the most important components of the system. Models that associate part of the high-energy emission and even the fast aperiodic variability to the jet itself are now being proposed and jets can no longer be ignored.
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The Jet Paradigm: From Microquasars to Quasars

The Jet Paradigm: From Microquasars to Quasars

The Jet Paradigm: From Microquasars to Quasars

The Jet Paradigm: From Microquasars to Quasars

Paperback(2010)

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Overview

The discovery of the first case of superluminal radio jets in our galaxy in 1994 from the bright and peculiar X-ray source GRS 1915+105 has opened the way to a major shift in the direction of studies of stellar-mass accreting binaries. The past decade has seen an impressive increase in multi-wavelength studies. It is now known that all black hole binaries in our galaxy are radio sources and most likely their radio emission originates from a powerful jet. In addition to the spectacular events related to the ejection of superluminal jets, steady jets are known from many systems. Compared with their supermassive cousins, the nuclei of active galaxies, stellar-mass X-ray binaries have the advantage of varying on time scales accessible within a human life (sometimes even much shorter than a second). This has led to the first detailed studies of the relation between accretion and ejection. It is even possible that, excluding their “soft” periods, the majority of the power in gal- tic sources lies in the jets and not in the accretion flows. This means that until a few years ago we were struggling with a physical problem, accretion onto compact objects, without considering one of the most important components of the system. Models that associate part of the high-energy emission and even the fast aperiodic variability to the jet itself are now being proposed and jets can no longer be ignored.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783642262159
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Publication date: 04/06/2012
Series: Lecture Notes in Physics , #794
Edition description: 2010
Pages: 285
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.03(d)

Table of Contents

Microquasars: Summary and Outlook.- X-Ray Emission from Black-Hole Binaries.- States and Transitions in Black Hole Binaries.- Radio Emission and Jets from Microquasars.- #x2018;Disc#x2013;Jet#x2019; Coupling in Black Hole X-Ray Binaries and Active Galactic Nuclei.- From Multiwavelength to Mass Scaling: Accretion and Ejection in Microquasars and AGN.- Jets in Active Galactic Nuclei.- X-Ray Variability of AGN and Relationship to Galactic Black Hole Binary Systems.- Theory of Magnetically Powered Jets.- General Relativistic MHD Jets.
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