The existence of warm and optically thick dissipative coronae above accretion disks
A. Rozanska, J. Malzac, R. Belmont, B. Czerny, P.-O. Petrucci

TL;DR
This paper analytically investigates the physical conditions and limits of warm, optically thick coronae above accretion disks, revealing constraints on their properties based on hydrostatic equilibrium and magnetic support.
Contribution
It provides an analytical framework to determine the maximum optical depth of dissipative coronae in hydrostatic equilibrium, highlighting the role of magnetic fields in extending these limits.
Findings
Thick, dissipative coronae can reach 0.5-1 keV temperatures if the disk is passive.
Without magnetic support, the corona's optical depth cannot exceed ~5 in hydrostatic equilibrium.
Strong magnetic fields can increase the maximum optical depth to ~20.
Abstract
In the past years, several observations of AGN and X-ray binaries have suggested the existence of a warm T around 0.5-1 keV and optically thick, \tau ~ 10-20, corona covering the inner parts of the accretion disk. These properties are directly derived from spectral fitting in UV to soft-X-rays using Comptonization models. However, whether such a medium can be both in radiative and hydrostatic equilibrium with an accretion disk is still uncertain. We investigate the properties of such warm, optically thick coronae and put constraints on their existence. We solve the radiative transfer equation for grey atmosphere analytically in a pure scattering medium, including local dissipation as an additional heating term in the warm corona. The temperature profile of the warm corona is calculated assuming it is cooled by Compton scattering, with the underlying dissipative disk providing photons to…
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