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Furiously fast and red: sub-second optical flaring in V404 Cyg during the 2015 outburst peak

Authors :
S. P. Littlefair
Dominic J. Walton
E. Kuulkers
Piergiorgio Casella
P. A. Charles
Farid Rahoui
Aarran W. Shaw
J. V. Hernández Santisteban
Christian Knigge
Mayukh Pahari
T. Muñoz-Darias
D. M. Russell
Kunal Mooley
Poshak Gandhi
John A. Tomsick
A. J. Castro-Tirado
M. D. Caballero-Garcia
Donald M. Terndrup
Rob Fender
S. S. Eikenberry
V. S. Dhillon
T. R. Marsh
Yigit Dallilar
L. K. Hardy
Diego Altamirano
T. Shahbaz
Jorge Casares
Robert I. Hynes
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We present observations of rapid (sub-second) optical flux variability in V404 Cyg during its 2015 June outburst. Simultaneous three-band observations with the ULTRACAM fast imager on four nights show steep power spectra dominated by slow variations on ~100-1000s timescales. Near the peak of the outburst on June 26, a dramatic change occurs and additional, persistent sub-second optical flaring appears close in time to giant radio and X-ray flaring. The flares reach peak optical luminosities of ~few x 10^{36} erg/s. Some are unresolved down to a time resolution of 24 milliseconds. Whereas the fast flares are stronger in the red, the slow variations are bluer when brighter. The redder slopes, emitted power, and characteristic timescales of the fast flares can be explained as optically-thin synchrotron emission from a compact jet arising on size scales ~140-500 Gravitational radii (with a possible additional contribution by a thermal particle distribution). The origin of the slower variations is unclear. The optical continuum spectral slopes are strongly affected by dereddening uncertainties and contamination by strong H{alpha} emission, but the variations of these slopes follow relatively stable loci as a function of flux. Cross-correlating the slow variations between the different bands shows asymmetries on all nights consistent with a small red skew (i.e., red lag). X-ray reprocessing and non-thermal emission could both contribute to these. These data reveal a complex mix of components over five decades in timescale during the outburst.<br />MNRAS in press (Accepted Mar 04 2016; Revised Mar 03; Reviewed Feb 22; Received Dec 22 2015), Advance Access: http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2016/03/14/mnras.stw571.abstract

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a976440c0878a157ac18ee2d40048c3e