Clumpy Outflow from Supercritical Accretion Flows
S. Takeuchi, K. Ohsuga, and S. Mineshige

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to reveal that supercritical accretion flows produce wide-angle, clumpy, radiation-driven outflows with specific structures and instabilities, which may explain observed variability in active galactic nuclei.
Contribution
First detailed simulation of clumpy, radiation-driven outflows from supercritical accretion flows onto black holes, highlighting Rayleigh-Taylor instability as a key formation mechanism.
Findings
Outflows reach velocities of 10% of light speed.
Clumps have sizes of about 10 Schwarzschild radii.
Clumpy structures may explain rapid light variations in AGNs.
Abstract
Significant fraction of matter in supercritical (or super-Eddington) accretion flow is blown away by radiation force, thus forming outflows, however, the properties of such radiation-driven outflows have been poorly understood. We have performed global two-dimensional radiaion-magnetohydrodynamic simulations of supercritical accretion flow onto a black hole with 10 or 10^8 solar masses in a large simulation box of 514 r_S x 514 r_S (with r_S being the Schwarzschild radius). We confirm that uncollimated outflows with velocities of 10 percents of the speed of light emerge from the innermost part of the accretion flow over wide angles of 10 - 50 degree from the disk rotation axis. Importantly, the outflows exhibit clumpy structure above heights of ~ 250 r_S. The typical size of the clumps is ~ 10 r_S, which corresponds to one optical depth, and their shapes are slightly elongated along the…
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