Radiation Transport Two-temperature GRMHD Simulations of Warped Accretion Disks

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 20-02-2023
Journal Astrophysical Journal Letters
Article number L48
Volume | Issue number 944 | 2
Number of pages 14
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
In many black hole (BH) systems, the accretion disk is expected to be misaligned with respect to the BH spin axis. If the scale height of the disk is much smaller than the misalignment angle, the spin of the BH can tear the disk into multiple, independently precessing "sub-disks.'' This is most likely to happen during outbursts in black hole X-Ray binaries (BHXRBs) and in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) accreting above a few percent of the Eddington limit, because the disk becomes razor-thin. Disk tearing has the potential to explain variability phenomena including quasi-periodic oscillations in BHXRBs and changing-look phenomena in AGNs. Here, we present the first radiative two-temperature general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulation of a strongly tilted (65°) accretion disk around an MBH = 10 M BH, which tears and precesses. This leads to luminosity swings between a few percent and 50viscous timescales. Surprisingly, even where the disk is radiation-pressure-dominated, the accretion disk is thermally stable over t ≳ 14,000 rg/c. This suggests warps play an important role in stabilizing the disk against thermal collapse. The disk forms two nozzle shocks perpendicular to the line of nodes where the scale height of the disk decreases tenfold and the electron temperature reaches Te ∼ 108-109 K. In addition, optically thin gas crossing the tear between the inner and outer disk gets heated to Te ∼ 108 K. This suggests that warped disks may emit a Comptonized spectrum that deviates substantially from idealized models.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/acb6f4
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