Low density, radiatively inefficient rotating-accretion flow onto a black hole
Kohei Inayoshi, Jeremiah P. Ostriker, Zoltan Haiman, Rolf Kuiper

TL;DR
This paper models low-density, radiatively inefficient accretion flows onto black holes, revealing a convection-dominated solution that significantly suppresses accretion rates, explaining the low luminosities of certain black holes without feedback mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a new steady-state accretion flow solution incorporating convection, applicable to low accretion rates, and explains observed low luminosities of black holes like SgrA* and M87.
Findings
Accretion rate is suppressed by convection, proportional to viscosity parameter.
Inner flow resembles convection-dominated accretion flow (CDAF) with density profile ~ r^{-1/2}.
Final accretion rate is 10^{-3} to 10^{-2} of Bondi rate, matching observed low luminosities.
Abstract
We study low-density axisymmetric accretion flows onto black holes (BHs) with two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations, adopting the -viscosity prescription. When the gas angular momentum is low enough to form a rotationally supported disk within the Bondi radius (), we find a global steady accretion solution. The solution consists of a rotational equilibrium distribution at , where the density follows , surrounding a geometrically thick and optically thin accretion disk at the centrifugal radius, where thermal energy generated by viscosity is transported via strong convection. Physical properties of the inner solution agree with those expected in convection-dominated accretion flows (CDAF; ). In the inner CDAF solution, the gas inflow rate decreases towards the center due to convection…
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