. A
microquasar (or radio emitting X-ray binary) is the smaller cousin of a
quasar. Microquasars are named after quasars, as they have some common characteristics: strong and variable radio emission, often resolvable as a pair of radio jets, and an
accretion disk surrounding a
compact object which is either a
black hole or a
neutron star. In quasars, the black hole is supermassive (millions of
solar masses); in microquasars, the mass of the compact object is only a few solar masses. In microquasars, the accreted mass comes from a normal star, and the accretion disk is very luminous in the optical and
X-ray regions. Microquasars are sometimes called
radio-jet X-ray binaries to distinguish them from other X-ray binaries. A part of the radio emission comes from
relativistic jets, often showing apparent
superluminal motion. Microquasars are very important for the study of
relativistic jets. The jets are formed close to the compact object, and timescales near the compact object are proportional to the mass of the compact object. Therefore, ordinary quasars take centuries to go through variations a microquasar experiences in one day. Noteworthy microquasars include
SS 433, in which atomic emission lines are visible from both jets;
GRS 1915+105, with an especially high jet velocity and the very bright
Cygnus X-1, detected up to the High Energy
gamma rays (E > 60 MeV). Extremely high energies of particles emitting in the VHE band might be explained by several mechanisms of particle acceleration (see
Fermi acceleration and
Centrifugal mechanism of acceleration). == See also ==