27,679 research outputs found
Does the circularization radius exist or not for low angular momentum accretion?
If the specific angular momentum of accretion gas at large radius is small
compared to the local Keplerian value, one usually believes that there exists a
"circularization radius" beyond which the angular momentum of accretion flow is
almost a constant while within which a disk is formed and the angular momentum
roughly follows the Keplerian distribution. In this paper, we perform numerical
simulations to study whether the picture above is correct in the context of hot
accretion flow. We find that for a steady accretion flow, the "circularization
radius" does not exist and the angular momentum profile will be smooth
throughout the flow. However, for transient accretion systems, such as the
tidal disruption of a star by a black hole, a "turning point" should exist in
the radial profile of the angular momentum, which is conceptually similar to
the "circularization radius". At this radius, the viscous timescale equals the
life time of the accretion event. The specific angular momentum is close to
Keplerian within this radius, while beyond this radius the angular momentum is
roughly constant.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted by MNRA
Fundamental Plane of Black Hole Activity in Quiescent Regime
A correlation among the radio luminosity (), X-ray luminosity
(), and black hole mass () in active galactic nuclei
(AGNs) and black hole binaries is known to exist and is called the "Fundamental
Plane" of black hole activity. Yuan & Cui (2005) predicts that the radio/X-ray
correlation index, , changes from to
when decreases below a
critical value . While many works favor such a change, there are
also several works claiming the opposite. In this paper, we gather from
literature a largest quiescent AGN (defined as ) sample to date, consisting of sources. We find that these
quiescent AGNs follow a radio/X-ray relationship, in
excellent agreement with the Yuan \& Cui prediction. The reason for the
discrepancy between the present result and some previous works is that their
samples contain not only quiescent sources but also "normal" ones (i.e.,
). In this case, the quiescent sources will
mix up with those normal ones in and . The value of
will then be between and , with the exact value
being determined by the sample composition, i.e., the fraction of the quiescent
and normal sources. Based on this result, we propose that a more physical way
to study the Fundamental Plane is to replace and with
and , respectively.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Zeeman-Induced Gapless Superconductivity with Partial Fermi Surface
We show that an in-plane magnetic field can drive two-dimensional
spin-orbit-coupled systems under superconducting proximity effect into a
gapless phase where parts of the normal state Fermi surface are gapped, and the
ungapped parts are reconstructed into a small Fermi surface of Bogoliubov
quasiparticles at zero energy. Charge distribution, spin texture, and density
of states of such "partial Fermi surface" are discussed. Material platforms for
its physical realization are proposed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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