The discovery was made using China's Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope, dubbed Insight-HXMT, reports Xinhua.
Researchers at the Institute of High Energy Physics under the Chinese Academy of Sciences cooperated with researchers from universities and institutes in China, Britain and Germany and reported the discovery which was published in the journal Nature Astronomy.
Relativistic jets are streams of matter emitted at speeds close to that of light, while accretion is the accumulation of matter into a central object via gravitational attraction.
LFQPOs, discovered in the 1980s, are commonly found in black hole X-ray binaries and their origin is still under debate, said the research article.
The properties of LFQPOs at high energies above 30 keV are closely related to the nature of the accretion flow in the innermost regions, and thus are key to testing existing models. The HXMT is capable of detecting emissions above 30 keV, thus playing a crucial role in the process.
The discovery will help people understand the behaviors of LFQPOs at hundreds of kiloelectron volts, and study the relativistic effects of a jet only hundreds of kilometers from a black hole, said the article.
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Launched in 2017, the Insight-HXMT is China's first Space X-ray astronomical satellite. It has wide energy coverage, large effective area in high energy band and high time resolution.
The HXMT can explore regions closer to the black hole's event horizon and neutron star surface.