279 research outputs found
Heating and Cooling of Hot Accretion Flows by Non Local Radiation
We consider non-local effects which arise when radiation emitted at one
radius of an accretion disk either heats or cools gas at other radii through
Compton scattering. We discuss three situations:
1. Radiation from the inner regions of an advection-dominated flow Compton
cooling gas at intermediate radii and Compton heating gas at large radii.
2. Soft radiation from an outer thin accretion disk Compton cooling a hot
one- or two-temperature flow on the inside.
3. Soft radiation from an inner thin accretion disk Compton cooling hot gas
in a surrounding one-temperature flow.
We describe how previous results are modified by these non-local
interactions. We find that Compton heating or cooling of the gas by the
radiation emitted in the inner regions of a hot flow is not important.
Likewise, Compton cooling by the soft photons from an outer thin disk is
negligible when the transition from a cold to a hot flow occurs at a radius
greater than some minimum . However, if the hot flow terminates at
, non-local cooling is so strong that the hot gas is cooled to
a thin disk configuration in a runaway process. In the case of a thin disk
surrounded by a hot one-temperature flow, we find that Compton cooling by soft
radiation dominates over local cooling in the hot gas for \dot{M} \gsim
10^{-3} \alpha \dot{M}_{Edd}, and R \lsim 10^4 R_{Schw}. As a result, the
maximum accretion rate for which an advection-dominated one-temperature
solution exists, decreases by a factor of , compared to the value
computed under an assumption of local energy balance.Comment: LaTeX aaspp.sty, 25 pages, and 6 figures; to appear in Ap
Disks Surviving the Radiation Pressure of Radio Pulsars
The radiation pressure of a radio pulsar does not necessarily disrupt a
surrounding disk. The position of the inner radius of a thin disk around a
neutron star can be estimated by comparing the electromagnetic energy density
generated by the neutron star with the kinetic energy density of the disk.
Inside the light cylinder, the near zone electromagnetic field is essentially
the dipole magnetic field, and the inner radius is the conventional Alfven
radius. Far outside the light cylinder, in the radiation zone, and the
electromagnetic energy density is where is the
Poynting vector. Shvartsman (1970) argued that a stable equilibrium can not be
found in the radiative zone because the electromagnetic energy density
dominates over the kinetic energy density, with the relative strength of the
electromagnetic stresses increasing with radius. In order to check whether this
is true also near the light cylinder, we employ global electromagnetic field
solutions for rotating oblique magnetic dipoles (Deutsch 1955). Near the light
cylinder the electromagnetic energy density increases steeply enough with
decreasing to balance the kinetic energy density at a stable equilibrium.
The transition from the near zone to the radiation zone is broad. The radiation
pressure of the pulsar can not disrupt the disk for values of the inner radius
up to about twice the light cylinder radius if the rotation axis and the
magnetic axis are orthogonal. This allowed range beyond the light cylinder
extends much further for small inclination angles. We discuss implications of
this result for accretion driven millisecond pulsars and young neutron stars
with fallback disks.Comment: Accepted by Astrophysical Journal, final version with a minor
correctio
Trans-sonic propeller stage
We follow the approach used by Davies and Pringle (1981) and discuss the
trans-sonic substage of the propeller regime. This substage is intermediate
between the supersonic and subsonic propeller substages. In the trans-sonic
regime an envelope around a magnetosphere of a neutron star passes through a
kind of a reorganization process. The envelope in this regime consists of two
parts. In the bottom one turbulent motions are subsonic. Then at some distance
the turbulent velocity becomes equal to the sound velocity.
During this substage the boundary propagates outwards till it
reaches the outer boundary, and so the subsonic regime starts.
We found that the trans-sonic substage is unstable, so the transition between
supersonic and subsonic substages proceeds on the dynamical time scale. For
realistic parameters this time is in the range from weeks to years.Comment: 8 pages with figures, submitted to Astron. Astroph. Transaction
Vacuum Breakdown near a Black Hole Charged by Hypercritical Accretion
We consider a black hole accreting spherically from the surrounding medium.
If accretion produces a luminosity close to the Eddington limit the hole
acquires a net charge so that electrons and ions can fall with the same
velocity. The condition for the electrostatic field to be large enough to break
the vacuum near the hole horizon translates into an upper limit for the hole
mass, The astrophysical conditions under
which this phaenomenon can take place are rather extreme, but in principle they
could be met by a mini black hole residing at the center of a star.Comment: 6 pages, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Physical properties of Tolman-Bayin solutions: some cases of static charged fluid spheres in general relativity
In this article, Einstein-Maxwell space-time has been considered in
connection to some of the astrophysical solutions as previously obtained by
Tolman (1939) and Bayin (1978). The effect of inclusion of charge into these
solutions has been investigated thoroughly and also the nature of fluid
pressure and mass density throughout the sphere have been discussed.
Mass-radius and mass-charge relations have been derived for various cases of
the charged matter distribution. Two cases are obtained where perfect fluid
with positive pressures give rise to electromagnetic mass models such that
gravitational mass is of purely electromagnetic origin.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
Ultra-high energy cosmic rays from Quark Novae
We explore acceleration of ions in the Quark Nova (QN) scenario, where a
neutron star experiences an explosive phase transition into a quark star (born
in the propeller regime). In this picture, two cosmic ray components are
isolated: one related to the randomized pulsar wind and the other to the
propelled wind, both boosted by the ultra-relativistic Quark Nova shock. The
latter component acquires energies while
the former, boosted pulsar wind, achieves ultra-high energies
eV. The composition is dominated by ions present in the pulsar wind in the
energy range above eV, while at energies below eV the
propelled ejecta, consisting of the fall-back neutron star crust material from
the explosion, is the dominant one. Added to these two components, the
propeller injects relativistic particles with Lorentz factors , later to be accelerated by galactic supernova shocks. The
QN model appears to be able to account for the extragalactic cosmic rays above
the ankle and to contribute a few percent of the galactic cosmic rays below the
ankle. We predict few hundred ultra-high energy cosmic ray events above
eV for the Pierre Auger detector per distant QN, while some thousands
are predicted for the proposed EUSO and OWL detectors.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure. Major revisions in the text. Accepted for
publication in the Astrophysical Journa
On Electrostatic Positron Acceleration In The Accretion Flow Onto Neutron Stars
As first shown by Shvartsman (1970), a neutron star accreting close to the
Eddington limit must acquire a positive charge in order for electrons and
protons to move at the same speed. The resulting electrostatic field may
contribute to accelerating positrons produced near the star surface in
conjunction with the radiative force. We reconsider the balance between energy
gains and losses, including inverse Compton (IC), bremsstrahlung and
non--radiative scatterings. It is found that, even accounting for IC losses
only, the maximum positron energy never exceeds keV. The
electrostatic field alone may produce energies keV at most. We
also show that Coulomb collisions and annihilation with accreting electrons
severely limit the number of positrons that escape to infinity.Comment: 9 pages plus 3 postscript figures, to be published in Ap
Where Are All The Fallback Disks? Constraints on Propeller Systems
Fallback disks are expected to form around new-born neutron stars following a
supernova explosion. In almost all cases, the disk will pass through a
propeller stage. If the neutron star is spinning rapidly (initial period ms) and has an ordinary magnetic moment ( G cm), the
rotational power transferred to the disk by the magnetic field of the neutron
star will exceed the Eddington limit by many orders of magnitude, and the disk
will be rapidly disrupted. Fallback disks can thus survive only around
slow-born neutron stars and around black holes, assuming the latter do not
torque their surrounding disks as strongly as do neutron stars. This might
explain the apparent rarity of fallback disks around young compact objects.Comment: Submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letter
Three-Dimensional Magnetohydrodynamic Simulations of Spherical Accretion
We present three-dimensional numerical magnetohydrodynamic simulations of
radiatively inefficient spherical accretion onto a black hole. The simulations
are initialized with a Bondi flow, and with a weak, dynamically unimportant,
large-scale magnetic field. The magnetic field is amplified as the gas flows
in. When the magnetic pressure approaches equipartition with the gas pressure,
the field begins to reconnect and the gas is heated up. The heated gas is
buoyant and moves outward, causing line stretching of the frozen-in magnetic
field. This leads to further reconnection, and more heating and
buoyancy-induced motions, so that the flow makes a transition to a state of
self-sustained convection. The radial structure of the flow changes
dramatically from its initial Bondi profile, and the mass accretion rate onto
the black hole decreases significantly. Motivated by the numerical results, we
develop a simplified analytical model of a radiatively inefficient spherical
flow in which convective transport of energy to large radii plays an important
role. In this "convection-dominated Bondi flow" the accretion velocity is
highly subsonic and the density varies with radius as ~R^{-1/2} rather than the
standard Bondi scaling ~R^{-3/2}. We estimate that the mass accretion rate onto
the black hole is significantly less than the Bondi accretion rate.
Convection-dominated Bondi flows may be relevant for understanding many
astrophysical phenomena, e.g. post-supernova fallback and radiatively
inefficient accretion onto supermassive black holes, stellar-mass black holes
and neutron stars.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Ap
A Thermal Bremsstrahlung Model For the Quiescent X-ray Emission from Sagittarius A*
I consider the thermal bremsstrahlung emission from hot accretion flows
(Bondi/ADAFs), taking into account the finite size of the observing telescope's
beam (R_beam) relative to the Bondi accretion radius (R_A). For R_beam >> R_A
soft X-ray emission from the hot interstellar medium surrounding the black hole
dominates the observed emission while for R_beam << R_A hard X-ray emission
from the accretion flow dominates. I apply these models to Chandra observations
of the Galactic Center, for which R_beam ~ R_A. I argue that bremsstrahlung
emission accounts for most of the ``quiescent'' (non-flaring) flux observed by
Chandra from Sgr A*; this emission is spatially extended on scales ~ R_A ~ 1''
and has a relatively soft spectrum, as is observed. If accretion onto the
central black hole proceeds via a Bondi or ADAF flow, a hard X-ray power law
should be present in deeper observations with a flux ~ 1/3 of the soft X-ray
flux; nondetection of this hard X-ray component would argue against ADAF/Bondi
models. I briefly discuss the application of these results to other
low-luminosity AGN.Comment: final version accepted by ApJ; some rewriting but conclusions
unchange
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