4.7 Article

Multiwavelength observations of the 2002 outburst of GX 339-4: Two patterns of X-ray-optical/near-infrared behavior

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 624, Issue 1, Pages 295-306

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/428722

Keywords

accretion, accretion disks; binaries : close; black hole physics; ISM : jets and outflows; stars : individual (GX 339-4); X-rays : stars

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We report on quasi-simultaneous Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer and optical / near-infrared (NIR) observations of the black hole candidate X-ray transient GX 339 - 4. Our observations were made over a time span of more than 8 months in 2002 and cover the initial rise and transition from a hard to a soft spectral state in X-rays. Two distinct patterns of correlated X-ray - optical/NIR behavior were found. During the hard state, the optical / NIR and X-ray fluxes correlated well, with a NIR versus X-ray flux power-law slope similar to that of the correlation found between X-ray and radio fluxes in previous studies of GX 339 - 4 and other black hole binaries. As the source went through an intermediate state, the optical/NIR fluxes decreased rapidly, and once it had entered the spectrally soft state, the optical / NIR spectrum of GX 339 - 4 was much bluer, and the ratio of X-ray to NIR flux was higher by a factor of more than 10 compared to the hard state. In the spectrally soft state, changes in the NIR preceded those in the soft X-rays by more than 2 weeks, indicating a disk origin of the NIR emission and providing a measure of the viscous timescale. A sudden onset of NIR flaring of similar to 0.5 mag on a timescale of 1 day was also observed during this period. We present spectral energy distributions, including radio data, and discuss possible sources for the optical/NIR emission. We conclude that, in the hard state, this emission probably originates in the optically thin part of a jet and that in none of the X-ray states is X-ray reprocessing the dominant source of optical / NIR emission. Finally, comparing the light curves from the all-skymonitor (ASM) and Proportional Counter Array (PCA) instruments, we find that the X-ray/NIR delay depends critically on the sensitivity of the X-ray detector, with the delay inferred from the PCA ( if present at all) being a factor of 3 - 6 times shorter than the delay inferred from the ASM; this may be important in interpreting previously reported X-ray - optical/NIR lags.

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