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Title: Spinning black holes magnetically connected to a Keplerian disk: Magnetosphere, reconnection sheet, particle acceleration, and coronal heating
Context. Accreting black holes (BHs) may be surrounded by a highly magnetized plasma threaded by an organized poloidal magnetic field. Nonthermal flares and power-law spectral components at high energy could originate from a hot, collisionless, and nearly force-free corona. The jets we often observe from these systems are believed to be rotation-powered and magnetically driven. Aims. We study axisymmetric BH magnetospheres, where a fraction of the magnetic field lines anchored in a surrounding disk are connected to the event horizon of a rotating BH. For different BH spins, we identify the conditions and sites of magnetic reconnection within 30 gravitational radii. Methods. With the fully general relativistic particle-in-cell code GRZeltron , we solve the time-dependent dynamics of the electron–positron pair plasma and of the electromagnetic fields around the BH. The aligned disk is represented by a steady and perfectly conducting plasma in Keplerian rotation, threaded by a dipolar magnetic field. Results. For prograde disks around Kerr BHs, the topology of the magnetosphere is hybrid. Twisted open magnetic field lines crossing the horizon power a Blandford-Znajek jet, while open field lines with their footpoint beyond a critical distance on the disk could launch a magneto-centrifugal wind. In the innermost regions, coupling magnetic field lines ensure the transfer of significant amounts of angular momentum and energy between the BH and the disk. From the Y point at the intersection of these three regions, a current sheet forms where vivid particle acceleration via magnetic reconnection takes place. We compute the synchrotron images of the current sheet emission. Conclusions. Our estimates for jet power and BH–disk exchanges match those derived from purely force-free models. Particles are accelerated at the Y point, which acts as a heat source for the so-called corona. It provides a physically motivated ring-shaped source of hard X-rays above the disk for reflection models. Episodic plasmoid ejection might explain millisecond flares observed in Cygnus X-1 in the high-soft state, but are too fast to account for daily nonthermal flares from Sgr A * . Particles flowing from the Y point down to the disk could produce a hot spot at the footpoint of the outermost closed magnetic field line.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1804048
NSF-PAR ID:
10405156
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Volume:
663
ISSN:
0004-6361
Page Range / eLocation ID:
A169
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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