The Structure and Spectral Features of a Thin Disk and Evaporation-Fed Corona in High-Luminosity AGNs
J. Y. Liu, B. F. Liu, E. L. Qiao, S. Mineshige

TL;DR
This paper models the structure and spectral features of the corona in high-luminosity AGNs, incorporating additional heating mechanisms to explain observed X-ray emissions and spectral behaviors at high accretion rates.
Contribution
It introduces a novel calculation of the corona structure with extra heating, showing the corona can survive at higher accretion rates and produce spectra consistent with observations.
Findings
Corona can extend to high accretion rates with additional heating.
X-ray spectra become harder with increased coronal energy fraction.
Bolometric correction factor increases with accretion rate.
Abstract
We investigate the accretion process in high-luminosity AGNs (HLAGNs) in the scenario of the disk evaporation model. Based on this model, the thin disk can extend down to the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) at accretion rates higher than ; while the corona is weak since part of the coronal gas is cooled by strong inverse Compton scattering of the disk photons. This implies that the corona cannot produce as strong X-ray radiation as observed in HLAGNs with large Eddington ratio. In addition to the viscous heating, other heating to the corona is necessary to interpret HLAGN. In this paper, we assume that a part of accretion energy released in the disk is transported into the corona, heating up the electrons and thereby radiated away. We for the first time, compute the corona structure with additional heating, taking fully into account the mass supply to the…
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