Jets and gamma-ray emission from isolated accreting black holes
M. V. Barkov, D. V. Khangulyan, S. B. Popov

TL;DR
This paper investigates how isolated black holes in the galaxy can produce jets and gamma-ray emissions through accretion, potentially contributing to cosmic ray populations and gamma-ray observations in molecular clouds.
Contribution
It demonstrates that accreting isolated black holes can generate jets via the Blandford-Znajeck mechanism, influencing cosmic ray and gamma-ray emissions in molecular clouds.
Findings
Jets can accelerate electrons up to 1 PeV in molecular clouds.
These sources may contribute to unidentified gamma-ray sources.
CR electron contribution depends on diffusion regimes within clouds.
Abstract
The large number of isolated black holes (IBHs) in the Galaxy, estimated to be 10^8, implies a very high density of 10^-4 pc^-3 and an average distance between IBHs of 10 pc. Our study shows that the magnetic flux, accumulated on the horizon of an IBH because of accretion of interstellar matter, allows the Blandford-Znajeck mechanism to be activated. Thus, electron-positron jets can be launched. We have performed 2D numerical modelling which allowed the jet power to be estimated. Their inferred properties make such jets a feasible electron accelerator which, in molecular clouds, allows electron energy to be boosted up to 1 PeV. For the conditions expected in molecular clouds the radiative cooling time should be comparable to the escape time. Thus these sources can contribute both to the population of unidentified point-like sources and to the local cosmic ray (CR) electron spectrum. The…
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