Chaotic cold accretion on to black holes in rotating atmospheres
M. Gaspari, F. Brighenti, P. Temi

TL;DR
This paper uses high-resolution 3D simulations to explore how rotation and turbulence influence chaotic cold accretion onto black holes, revealing conditions that boost accretion rates and match observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates how turbulence and thermal instability drive chaotic cold accretion, providing new insights into accretion dynamics and observable features in massive galaxies.
Findings
Turbulence enhances cold gas condensation and accretion rates.
Accretion rates can reach up to 100 times the Bondi rate.
Simulated profiles match observed X-ray and Hα features.
Abstract
Chaotic cold accretion (CCA) profoundly differs from classic black hole accretion models. Using 3D high-resolution simulations, we probe the impact of rotation on the hot and cold accretion flow in a typical massive galaxy. In the hot mode, with or without turbulence, the pressure-dominated flow forms a geometrically thick rotational barrier, suppressing the accretion rate to ~1/3 of the Bondi rate. When radiative cooling is dominant, the gas loses pressure support and quickly circularizes in a cold thin disk. In the more common state of a turbulent and heated atmosphere, CCA drives the dynamics if the gas velocity dispersion exceeds the rotational velocity, i.e., turbulent Taylor number < 1. Extended multiphase filaments condense out of the hot phase via thermal instability and rain toward the black hole, boosting the accretion rate up to 100 times the Bondi rate. Initially, turbulence…
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