High-frequency quasi-periodic light variations from arc-shaped gas clouds falling to a black hole
Kotaro Moriyama, Shin Mineshige, Hiroyuki R. Takahashi

TL;DR
This study uses 3D relativistic simulations to analyze arc-shaped gas clouds falling into a black hole, explaining observed high-frequency quasi-periodic oscillations through their dynamic and radiative properties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of gas cloud formation, motion, and emission near black holes, linking these to observed X-ray variability and HF QPOs.
Findings
Gas clouds form intermittently with arc shapes.
Clouds fall slowly while maintaining Keplerian velocity.
Luminosity variations match observed HF QPOs.
Abstract
We investigate dynamical and radiative properties of arc-shaped gas clouds falling onto a stellar mass black hole based on the three-dimensional general relativistic radiation-magnetohydrodynamics (3D-GRRMHD) simulation data. Assuming that the gas clouds radiate due mainly to the free-free emission and/or optically thick, inverse Compton scattering, we calculate how the emissivity distributions develop with time. We find that (1) gas clouds, each of which has a ring-like or arc shape, are intermittently formed, and that (2) they slowly fall to the black hole, keeping nearly the Keplerian orbital velocity. These features support the dynamical properties of the gas clouds assumed in the spin measurement method proposed by Moriyama & Mineshige 2015, but the radius of the inner edge of the accretion disk is larger than that of the marginally stable orbit (ISCO). Next, we examine how each…
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