How Mass Flows Through Accretion Discs: A Spectral-Timing Vision for the 2040s
Simone Scaringi (1), Domitilla de Martino (2), Anna F. Pala (3), Andrea Sanna (4), Paul Groot (5,6,7), Kieran O'Brien (1), Alessandro Ederoclite (8), Noel Castro Segura (9), Deanne L. Coppejans (9), Krystian Ilkiewicz (10), Piergiorgio Casella (11), David Buckley (7,6)

TL;DR
This paper advocates for high-cadence optical spectral-timing observations of accretion discs, especially around white dwarfs, to unravel mass flow mechanisms and test scale-invariance across different astrophysical systems in the 2040s.
Contribution
It proposes a novel observational approach combining spectral and timing data to directly study accretion physics across various scales.
Findings
Time-lags in white dwarf systems suggest propagating fluctuations.
Spectral-timing can distinguish between disc regions and flow dynamics.
Upcoming observatories will enable unprecedented accretion studies.
Abstract
Understanding how mass and angular momentum flow through accretion discs remains a fundamental unsolved problem in astrophysics. Accreting white dwarfs offer an ideal laboratory for addressing this question: their variability occurs on accessible timescales of seconds to minutes, and their optical spectra contain continuum and emission-line components that trace distinct disc regions. Broad-band timing studies have revealed time-lags similar to those observed in X-ray binaries and active galactic nuclei, suggesting propagating fluctuations and possible coupling to an inner hot flow. However, the blending of line and continuum light in broad filters prevents a physical interpretation of these signals. The 2040s will bring an unprecedented number of disc-accreting systems discovered by Rubin-LSST, space-based gravitational-wave observatories, and third-generation ground and space-based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
