Title: Electron thermalization and emission from compact magnetized sources
1Electron thermalizationand emission from
compact magnetized sources
- Indrek Vurm and Juri Poutanen
- University of Oulu, Finland
2Spectra 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
3Spectra 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
4Electron 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?
5Cooling 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
6Thermalization 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
9Numerical 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
10Our 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.
11Variable injection slope
12Variable luminosity
13Variable luminosity
14Role of magnetic field
15Role of the external disk photons
16Role of the external disk photons
0
17Conclusions
- 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.