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Low-radiative efficiency accretion: Microphysics and applications to low-luminosity AGN

Posted on:2000-03-01Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Harvard UniversityCandidate:Quataert, Eliot James LeoFull Text:PDF
GTID:2460390014961695Subject:Physics
Abstract/Summary:
There is growing dynamical evidence that most nearby galaxies contain central “massive dark objects,” most likely supermassive black holes. Accretion onto a supermassive black hole may therefore be commonplace, and not just restricted to quasars and active galactic nuclei (AGN). This hypothesis is supported by observational surveys which show that the majority of nearby galaxies have nuclear emission properties reminiscent of AGN. Their emission-line and bolometric luminosities are, however, ~102 – 105 times smaller than typical AGN.; In this thesis I explore several issues related to the physics of these low luminosity active galactic nuclei (LLAGN). In particular, it has been proposed that LLAGN are supermassive black holes accreting mass via a radiatively inefficient advection-dominated accretion flow, in which most of the energy dissipated by turbulence is carried with the gas through the event horizon rather than being radiated. This requires that turbulence dissipate most of its energy into the protons, rather than the electrons. I calculate the heating of electrons and protons by the collisionless dissipation of magneto-hydrodynamic turbulence and argue that preferential proton heating can only be achieved for relatively subthermal magnetic fields (roughly β 10, where β is the average ratio of the gas pressure to the magnetic pressure in the accretion flow). For stronger, near equipartition, magnetic fields (β ~ 1), the electrons receive most of the turbulent energy. I give an independent argument, based on a fluid model for the radial evolution of the magnetic energy density in the accretion flow, that magnetic fields in advection-dominated accretion flows may be somewhat subthermal.; An alternative explanation for LLAGN is that they accrete mass at very low rates. This is, however, inconsistent with accretion rate estimates (based on Bondi's method) in nearby massive elliptical galaxies and the center of our Galaxy. I give a detailed discussion of such estimates for the Galactic Center. The Bondi accretion rate estimates reflect the gas properties far from the black hole, rather than near the event horizon where most of the radiation originates. Part of the explanation for LLAGN may therefore be that most of the mass supplied to the accretion flow does not reach the central object, but is lost to an outflow/wind. I explore the observational consequences of this proposal and argue that current observations of all low luminosity accreting systems are consistent with significant mass loss from the accretion flow, provided that the electrons receive a reasonable fraction (∼30%) of the turbulent energy. I give a detailed discussion of future observations which can assess the importance of mass loss in LLAGN. I conclude this thesis by analyzing the constraints on the physics of accretion imposed by broad-band spectral observations of four well-known LLAGN (M81, M87, NGC 4579, and NGC 4594).
Keywords/Search Tags:Accretion, LLAGN, Agn, Supermassive black
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