The effectively optically thin accretion flow and its implication in supermassive black holes
Mingjun Liu, B. F. Liu, Yilong Wang, Huaqing Cheng, Weimin Yuan

TL;DR
This paper introduces the effectively optically thin accretion flow as a new stable solution occurring at near-Eddington accretion rates, explaining spectral features in supermassive black holes and bridging existing accretion models.
Contribution
It identifies and characterizes the effectively optically thin accretion flow, a novel solution occurring at high accretion rates, with implications for AGN spectra and black hole accretion physics.
Findings
Effectively optically thin flow occurs at 0.1-10 Eddington rates.
Flow produces a multi-color Wien spectrum and a blackbody component.
Predicted viscosity parameter matches observed variability data.
Abstract
Based on a unified description of various accretion flows, we find a long-ignored solution - the effectively optically thin accretion flow, occurring at accretion rates around Eddington value. As a consequence of radiation-pressure dominance, the density in a standard thin disc (SSD) decreases with the increase of accretion rates, making the innermost region effectively optically thin. Further increase in accretion rate leads to a rise of the temperature so that the Compton cooling is able to balance the accretion released energy. We demonstrate that the effectively optically thin flow is characterized by moderate temperature and large scattering optical depth, producing a multi-color Wien spectrum. For an appropriate accretion rate, the accretion flow transforms from an outer SSD to an inner effectively optically thin flow. Thus, the spectra of the whole accretion flow exhibit two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
