Modeling quasar accretion disc temperature profiles
Patrick B. Hall, E. S. Noordeh, L. S. Chajet, E. Weiss (York, University, Toronto, Canada), C. J. Nixon (JILA)

TL;DR
This paper explores various models of quasar accretion disc temperature profiles to explain microlensing observations, finding that certain non-standard temperature distributions better match observed sizes but face challenges fitting spectral data.
Contribution
It introduces and evaluates alternative disc temperature profile models, including shock-heated and phenomenological profiles, to reconcile observations with theoretical predictions.
Findings
Disrupted misaligned discs produce shock heating inconsistent with observed spectra.
Temperature spike models improve size fits but overpredict quasar fluxes.
Weak shocks in torn discs do not significantly increase half-light radii.
Abstract
Microlensing observations indicate that quasar accretion discs have half-light radii larger than expected from standard theoretical predictions based on quasar fluxes or black hole masses. Blackburne and colleagues have also found a very weak wavelength dependence of these half-light radii. We consider disc temperature profile models that might match these observations. Nixon and colleagues have suggested that misaligned accretion discs around spinning black holes will be disrupted at radii small enough for the Lense-Thirring torque to overcome the disc's viscous torque. Gas in precessing annuli torn off a disc will spread radially and intersect with the remaining disc, heating the disc at potentially large radii. However, if the intersection occurs at an angle of more than a degree or so, highly supersonic collisions will shock-heat the gas to a Compton temperature of T~10^7 K, and the…
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