Bayesian Accretion Modeling: Axisymmetric Equatorial Emission in the Kerr Spacetime
Daniel C. M Palumbo, Zachary Gelles, Paul Tiede, Dominic O. Chang,, Dominic W. Pesce, Andrew Chael, Michael D. Johnson

TL;DR
This paper develops a fast, axisymmetric accretion model to directly infer black hole parameters from EHT data, revealing the potential and limitations of current observations in constraining black hole spacetimes.
Contribution
It introduces a computationally efficient model that directly constrains black hole mass, spin, and inclination from interferometric data, accounting for unknown accretion and emission properties.
Findings
Model fits magnetically arrested disks well
Mass estimates within 10% of true values
Spin remains unconstrained with current data
Abstract
The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) has produced images of two supermassive black holes, Messier~87* (M 87*) and Sagittarius~A* (Sgr A*). The EHT collaboration used these images to indirectly constrain black hole parameters by calibrating measurements of the sky-plane emission morphology to images of general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulations. Here, we develop a model for directly constraining the black hole mass, spin, and inclination through signatures of lensing, redshift, and frame dragging, while simultaneously marginalizing over the unknown accretion and emission properties. By assuming optically thin, axisymmetric, equatorial emission near the black hole, our model gains orders of magnitude in speed over similar approaches that require radiative transfer. Using 2017 EHT M 87* baseline coverage, we use fits of the model to itself to show that the data are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Mechanics and Biomechanics Studies · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
