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      Detection of a Series of X-ray Dips Associated with a Radio Flare in GRS 1915+105

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          Abstract

          We report the detection of a series of X-ray dips in the Galactic black hole candidate GRS 1915+105 during 1999 June 6-17 from observations carried out with the Pointed Proportional Counters of the Indian X-ray Astronomy Experiment on board the Indian satellite IRS-P3. The observations were made after the source made a transition from a steady low-hard state to a chaotic state which occuered within a few hours. Dips of about 20-160 seconds duration are observed on most of the days. The X-ray emission outside the dips shows a QPO at ~ 4 Hz which has characteristics similar to the ubiquitous 0.5 - 10 Hz QPO seen during the low-hard state of the source. During the onset of dips this QPO is absent and also the energy spectrum is soft and the variability is low compared to the non-dip periods. These features gradually re-appear as the dip recovers. The onset of the occurrence of a large number of such dips followed the start of a huge radio flare of strength 0.48 Jy (at 2.25 GHz). We interpret these dips as the cause for mass ejection due to the evacuation of matter from an accretion disk around the black hole. We propose that a super-position of a large number of such dip events produces a huge radio jet in GRS 1915+105.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          27 August 2000
          Article
          10.1086/318280
          astro-ph/0008414
          60be377f-0127-4c93-b48c-518139b6737d
          History
          Custom metadata
          18 pages, 7 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ
          astro-ph

          General astrophysics
          General astrophysics

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