X-ray Polarization from Accreting Black Holes: Coronal Emission
Jeremy D. Schnittman, Julian H. Krolik (Johns Hopkins)

TL;DR
This study models X-ray polarization from accreting black holes using general relativistic Monte Carlo simulations, exploring how different coronal geometries influence polarization signatures to aid in understanding black hole environments.
Contribution
It introduces comprehensive polarization calculations for various corona geometries around black holes, advancing the interpretation of X-ray polarization observations.
Findings
Polarization transitions from horizontal to vertical across energies.
Coronal geometry significantly affects polarization signatures.
Models can help distinguish between different corona structures.
Abstract
We present new calculations of X-ray polarization from accreting black holes (BHs), using a Monte-Carlo ray-tracing code in full general relativity. In our model, an optically thick disk in the BH equatorial plane produces thermal seed photons with polarization oriented parallel to the disk surface. These seed photons are then inverse-Compton scattered through a hot (but thermal) corona, producing a hard X-ray power-law spectrum. We consider three different models for the corona geometry: a wedge ``sandwich'' with aspect ratio H/R and vertically-integrated optical depth tau_0 constant throughout the disk; an inhomogeneous ``clumpy'' corona with a finite number of hot clouds distributed randomly above the disk within a wedge geometry; and a spherical corona of uniform density, centered on the BH and surrounded by a truncated thermal disk with inner radius R_edge. In all cases we find a…
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