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Electron thermalization and emission from compact magnetized sources

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Electron thermalization and emission from compact magnetized sources Indrek Vurm and Juri Poutanen University of Oulu, Finland Spectra of accreting black holes Hard ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electron thermalization and emission from compact magnetized sources


1
Electron thermalizationand emission from
compact magnetized sources
  • Indrek Vurm and Juri Poutanen
  • University of Oulu, Finland

2
Spectra of accreting black holes
  • Hard state
  • Thermal Comptonization
  • Weak
  • non-thermal tail
  • Soft state
  • Dominant disk blackbody
  • Non-thermal tail extending to a few MeV

Zdziarski et al. 2002
3
Spectra of accreting black holes
Cygnus X-1
  • Hard state
  • Thermal Comptonization
  • Weak non-thermal tail
  • Soft state
  • Dominant disk blackbody
  • Non-thermal tail extending to a few MeV

keV
Zdziarski Gierlinski 2004
4
Electron distribution
  • Why electrons are (mostly) thermal in the hard
    state?
  • Why electrons are (mostly) non-thermal in the
    soft state?
  • Spectral transitions can be explained if
    electrons are heated in HS, and accelerated in SS
    (Poutanen Coppi 1998).
  • What is the thermalization?
  • Coulomb - not efficient
  • synchrotron self-absorption?

5
Cooling vs. escape
  • Compton scattering
  • Synchrotron radiation

Luminosity compactness
Magnetic compactness
R
Cooling is always faster than escape if lrad
gt 1 and/or lB gt 1
Vesc
6
Thermalization by Coulomb collisions
  • Cooling
  • Rate of energy exchange with a low energy thermal
    pool of electrons by Coulomb collisions
  • Thermalization happens only at very low energies
  • In compact sources, Coulomb thermalization is not
    efficient!

7
Synchrotron self-absorption
  • Assume power-law e distribution
  • Electron heating in self-absorption (SA) regime
  • Nonrelativistic limit
  • Relativistic limit
  • Electron cooling
  • Ratio of heating and cooling in SA relativistic
    regime

At low energies heating always dominates
8
Synchrotron self-absorption
  • Efficient thermalizing mechanism.
  • Time-scale synchrotron cooling time

Ghisellini, Haardt, Svensson 1998
9
Numerical simulations
  • Synchrotron boiler (Ghisellini, Guilbert,
    Svensson 1988)
  • synchrotron emission and thermalization by
    synchrotron self-absorption (SSA), electron
    equation only, self-consistent
  • Ghisellini, Haardt, Svensson (1998)
  • synchrotron and Compton cooling, SSA
    thermalization
  • not fully self-consistent (only electron equation
    solved)
  • EQPAIR (Coppi)
  • Compton scattering, pair production,
    bremsstrahlung, Coulomb thermalization
    self-consistent, but electron thermal pool at low
    energies
  • Large Particle Monte Carlo (Stern)
  • Compton scattering, pair production, SSA
    thermalization self-consistent, but numerical
    problems because of SSA

10
Our code
  • One-zone, isotropic particle distributions,
    tangled B-field
  • Processes
  • Compton scattering
  • exact Klein-Nishina scattering cross-sections for
    all particles
  • diffusion limit at low energies
  • synchrotron radiation exact emissivity/absorption
    for photons and heating/cooling (thermalization)
    for pairs.
  • pair-production, exact rates
  • Time-dependent, coupled kinetic equations for
    electrons, positrons and photons.
  • Contain both integral and differential terms
  • Discretized on energy and time grids and solved
    iteratively as a set of coupled systems of
    linear algebraic equations
  • Exact energy conservation.

11
Variable injection slope
12
Variable luminosity
13
Variable luminosity
14
Role of magnetic field
15
Role of the external disk photons
16
Role of the external disk photons
0
17
Conclusions
  • Hard injection produces too soft spectra (due to
    strong synchrotron emission) inconsistent with
    hard state of GBHs.
  • Hard state spectra of GBHs synchrotron
    self-Compton, no feedback or contribution from
    the disk is needed.
  • At high L, the spectrum is close to saturated
    Comptonization peaking at 5 keV, similar to
    thermal bump in the very high state.
  • Spectral state transitions can be a result of
    variation of the ratio of disk luminosity and
    power dissipated in the hot flow. Our
    self-consistent simulations show that the
    electron distribution in this case changes from
    nearly thermal in the hard state to nearly
    non-thermal in the soft state.
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