9,586 research outputs found
Ultraluminous X-ray Sources and Star Formation
Chandra observations of the Cartwheel galaxy reveal a population of
ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) with lifetimes < 10^7 yr associated with a
spreading wave of star formation which began some 3 x 10^8 yr ago. A population
of high-mass X-ray binaries provides a simple model: donor stars of initial
masses M_2 > 15 Msun transfer mass on their thermal timescales to black holes
of masses M_1 > 10 Msun.
For alternative explanations of the Cartwheel ULX population in terms of
intermediate-mass black holes (IMBH) accreting from massive stars, the inferred
production rate > 10^-6 yr^-1 implies at least 300 IMBHs, and more probably 3 x
10^4, within the star-forming ring. These estimates are increased by factors
eta^-1 if the efficiency eta with which IMBHs find companions of > 15 Msun
within 10^7 yr is <1. Current models of IMBH production would require a very
large mass (\ga 10^{10}\msun) of stars to have formed new clusters. Further,
the accretion efficiency must be low (< 6 x 10^-3) for IMBH binaries,
suggesting super-Eddington accretion, even though intermediate black hole
masses are invoked with the purpose of avoiding it.
These arguments suggest either that to make a ULX, an IMBH must accrete from
some as yet unknown non-stellar mass reservoir with very specific properties,
or that most if not all ULXs in star-forming galaxies are high-mass X-ray
binaries.Comment: 3 pages, no figures; MNRAS accepted with minor amendment
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Abstracting Builtins for Groundness Analysis
This note clarifies how to handle solution gathering meta-calls, asserts and retracts in the groundness analysis of Prolog
Black hole foraging: feedback drives feeding
We suggest a new picture of supermassive black hole (SMBH) growth in galaxy
centers. Momentum-driven feedback from an accreting hole gives significant
orbital energy but little angular momentum to the surrounding gas. Once central
accretion drops, the feedback weakens and swept-up gas falls back towards the
SMBH on near-parabolic orbits. These intersect near the black hole with
partially opposed specific angular momenta, causing further infall and
ultimately the formation of a small-scale accretion disk. The feeding rates
into the disk typically exceed Eddington by factors of a few, growing the hole
on the Salpeter timescale and stimulating further feedback. Natural
consequences of this picture include (i) the formation and maintenance of a
roughly toroidal distribution of obscuring matter near the hole; (ii) random
orientations of successive accretion disk episodes; (iii) the possibility of
rapid SMBH growth; (iv) tidal disruption of stars and close binaries formed
from infalling gas, resulting in visible flares and ejection of hypervelocity
stars; (v) super-solar abundances of the matter accreting on to the SMBH; and
(vi) a lower central dark-matter density, and hence annihilation signal, than
adiabatic SMBH growth implies. We also suggest a simple sub-grid recipe for
implementing this process in numerical simulations.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ Letters, 5 pages, 1 figur
Do jets precess... or even move at all?
Observations of accreting black holes often provoke suggestions that their
jets precess. The precession is usually supposed to result from a combination
of the Lense-Thirring effect and accretion disc viscosity. We show that this is
unlikely for any type of black hole system, as the disc generally has too
little angular momentum compared with a spinning hole to cause any significant
movement of the jet direction across the sky on short timescales. Uncorrelated
accretion events, as in the chaotic accretion picture of active galactic
nuclei, change AGN jet directions only on timescales \gtrsim 10^7 yr. In this
picture AGN jet directions are stable on shorter timescales, but uncorrelated
with any structure of the host galaxy, as observed. We argue that observations
of black-hole jets precessing on timescales short compared to the accretion
time would be a strong indication that the accretion disc, and not the standard
Blandford-Znajek mechanism, is responsible for driving the jet. This would be
particularly convincing in a tidal disruption event. We suggest that additional
disc physics is needed to explain any jet precession on timescales short
compared with the accretion time. Possibilities include the radiation warping
instability, or disc tearing.Comment: 4 pages. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
AGN Flickering and Chaotic Accretion
Observational arguments suggest that the growth phases of the supermassive
black holes in active galactic nuclei have a characteristic timescale yr. We show that this is the timescale expected in the chaotic accretion
picture of black hole feeding, because of the effect of self-gravity in
limiting the mass of any accretion disc feeding event.Comment: 3 pages. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
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