Gamma-ray emission from proton-proton interactions in hot accretion flows
Andrzej Niedzwiecki, Fu-Guo Xie, Agnieszka Stepnik

TL;DR
This paper models gamma-ray emission from proton-proton interactions in hot accretion flows around supermassive black holes, accounting for relativistic effects and absorption, to explore how black hole spin influences observable gamma-ray signals.
Contribution
It introduces a fully relativistic model of hadronic gamma-ray emission in accretion flows, incorporating photon transfer and absorption effects, and examines the impact of black hole spin on gamma-ray observables.
Findings
Gamma-ray emissivity is strongly affected by black hole spin within ~10 gravitational radii.
Low-luminosity flows are transparent to gamma-rays below 10 GeV, enabling spin constraints.
High-luminosity flows' gamma-ray emission is absorbed, obscuring spin information.
Abstract
We present a model of gamma-ray emission through neutral pion production and decay in two-temperature accretion flows around supermassive black holes. We refine previous studies of such a hadronic gamma-ray emission by taking into account (1) relativistic effects in the photon transfer and (2) absorption of gamma-ray photons in the radiation field of the flow. We use a fully general relativistic description of both the radiative and hydrodynamic processes, which allows us to study the dependence on the black hole spin. The spin value strongly affects the gamma-ray emissivity within ~10 gravitational radii. The central regions of flows with the total luminosities L < 0.001 of the Eddington luminosity are mostly transparent to photons with energies below 10 GeV, permitting investigation of the effects of space-time metric. For such L, an observational upper limit on the gamma-ray (0.1-10…
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