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  4. Multi-wavelength view of the galactic black-hole binary GRS 1716–249
 
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Multi-wavelength view of the galactic black-hole binary GRS 1716–249

Source
Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy
ISSN
02506335
Date Issued
2021-10-01
Author(s)
Rout, Sandeep K.
Vadawale, Santosh V.
Aarthy, E.
Ganesh, Shashikiran
Joshi, Vishal
Roy, Jayashree
Misra, Ranjeev
Yadav, J. S.
DOI
10.1007/s12036-021-09696-5
Volume
42
Issue
2
Abstract
The origins of X-ray and radio emissions during an X-ray binary outburst are comparatively better understood than those of ultraviolet, optical and infrared radiation. This is because multiple competing mechanisms – emission from intrinsic and irradiated disk, secondary star emission, synchrotron emission from jet and/or non-thermal electron cloud, etc – peak in these mid-energy ranges. Ascertaining the true emission mechanism and segregating the contribution of different mechanisms, if present, is important for correct understanding of the energetics of the system and hence its geometry and other properties. We have studied the multi-wavelength spectral energy distribution of the galactic X-ray binary GRS 1716-249 ranging from near infrared (5 × 10 <sup>- 4</sup> keV) to hard X-rays (120 keV) using observations from AstroSat, Swift, and Mount Abu Infrared Observatory. Broadband spectral fitting suggests that the irradiated accretion disk dominates emission in ultraviolet and optical regimes. The near infrared emission exhibits some excess than the prediction of the irradiated disk model, which is most likely due to Synchrotron emission from jets as suggested by radio emission. Irradiation of the inner disk by the hard X-ray emission from the Corona also plays a significant role in accounting for the soft X-ray emission.
Publication link
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2012.12616
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/25275
Subjects
Black holes | jets | NIR/optical/UV | synchrotron emission | X-ray binary
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