H-AMR FORGE'd in FIRE I: Magnetic state transitions, jet launching and radiative emission in super-Eddington, highly magnetized quasar disks formed from cosmological initial conditions
Nicholas Kaaz, Matthew Liska, Alexander Tchekhovskoy, Philip F., Hopkins, Jonatan Jacquemin-Ide

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to explore how highly magnetized, super-Eddington quasar disks form, transition magnetic states, launch jets, and produce observable radiation, providing insights into quasar behavior and black hole growth.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach combining cosmological initial conditions with general-relativistic radiation magnetohydrodynamics to study magnetic state transitions and jet launching in quasar disks.
Findings
Magnetic state transition occurs within 200 gravitational radii.
Disks can accrete at rates five times the Eddington limit.
Outflows and radiation energy can reach up to 60-100% of accreted rest mass energy.
Abstract
Quasars are powered by supermassive black hole (SMBH) accretion disks, yet standard disk models are inconsistent with many quasar observations. Recently, Hopkins et al. (2024) simulated the formation of a quasar disk feeding a SMBH of mass in a host galaxy that evolved from cosmological initial conditions. The disk had surprisingly strong toroidal magnetic fields that supported it vertically from gravity and powered fast accretion. What radiation and feedback can such a system produce? To answer this, we must follow the gas to the event horizon. For this, we interpolated the accretion system onto the grid of the general-relativistic radiation magnetohydrodynamics code H-AMR and performed 3D simulations with BH spins and . This remapping generates spurious magnetic monopoles, which we erase using a novel divergence cleaning approach. Despite the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
