Supermassive black-hole imaging with a self-consistent electron-temperature prescription
Alejandro Cruz-Osorio, Claudio Meringolo, Christian M. Fromm, Yosuke Mizuno, Sergio Servidio, Antonios Nathanail, Ziri Younsi, Luciano Rezzolla

TL;DR
This paper introduces a self-consistent, microscopic plasma physics-based method for modeling electron temperatures in supermassive black-hole environments, improving the accuracy of jet and emission predictions from simulations.
Contribution
It presents the first ab-initio electron temperature model derived from microscopic plasma simulations, enhancing black-hole imaging and emission modeling accuracy.
Findings
Better match to observed jet morphology and width at 86 GHz
Improved broadband spectral emission predictions
Highlights importance of magnetic reconnection in electron heating
Abstract
The recent 230 GHz observations by the Event Horizon Telescope have resolved the innermost structure of the M87 galaxy, revealing a ring-like feature consistent with thermal synchrotron emission from a magnetized torus surrounding a rotating supermassive black hole. Moreover, Global Millimeter VLBI Array observations at 86 GHz have revealed a larger-scale, edge-brightened jet with clear signatures of non-thermal emission. The theoretical modelling of these observations involves advanced general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of magnetized accretion disks around rotating black holes, together with the associated synchrotron emission, which is normally treated with simplified expressions for the electron temperature and assuming a purely thermal distribution. However, an important non-thermal component is expected to be present, making the thermal-emission model not only an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
