The correlation between the total magnetic flux and the total jet power
E. Nokhrina

TL;DR
This paper investigates the relationship between magnetic flux near black holes and jet power, proposing methods to estimate magnetic flux from observations and comparing it with theoretical models to understand jet dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a new approach to estimate magnetic flux in jets from core shift and brightness temperature measurements, accounting for jet structure and rotation rate assumptions.
Findings
Magnetic flux estimates align well with observed jet power.
Most sources likely are not in a magnetically arrested disk state.
Estimated rotation rates are extremely slow, suggesting different accretion states.
Abstract
Magnetic field threading a black hole ergosphere is believed to play the key role in both driving the powerful relativistic jets observed in active galactic nuclei and extracting the rotational energy from a black hole via Blandford-Znajek process. The magnitude of magnetic field and the magnetic flux in the vicinity of a central black hole is predicted by theoretical models. On the other hand, the magnetic field in a jet can be estimated through measurements of either the core shift effect or the brightness temperature. In both cases the obtained magnetic field is in the radiating domain, so its direct application to the calculation of the magnetic flux needs some theoretical assumptions. In this paper we address the issue of estimating the magnetic flux contained in a jet using the measurements of a core shift effect and of a brightness temperature for the jets, directed almost at the…
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