A Connection Between Plasma Conditions Near Black Hole Event Horizons And Outflow Properties

© 2015. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Accreting black holes are responsible for producing the fastest, most powerful outflows of matter in the universe. The formation process of powerful jets close to black holes is poorly understood, and the conditions leading to jet forma...

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Main Authors: Koljonen, K., Russell, D., Fernández-Ontiveros, J., Markoff, S., Russell, T., Miller-Jones, James, Van Der Horst, A., Bernardini, F., Casella, P., Curran, Peter, Gandhi, P., Soria, Roberto
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36516
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author Koljonen, K.
Russell, D.
Fernández-Ontiveros, J.
Markoff, S.
Russell, T.
Miller-Jones, James
Van Der Horst, A.
Bernardini, F.
Casella, P.
Curran, Peter
Gandhi, P.
Soria, Roberto
author_facet Koljonen, K.
Russell, D.
Fernández-Ontiveros, J.
Markoff, S.
Russell, T.
Miller-Jones, James
Van Der Horst, A.
Bernardini, F.
Casella, P.
Curran, Peter
Gandhi, P.
Soria, Roberto
author_sort Koljonen, K.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2015. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Accreting black holes are responsible for producing the fastest, most powerful outflows of matter in the universe. The formation process of powerful jets close to black holes is poorly understood, and the conditions leading to jet formation are currently hotly debated. In this paper, we report an unambiguous empirical correlation between the properties of the plasma close to the black hole and the particle acceleration properties within jets launched from the central regions of accreting stellar-mass and supermassive black holes. In these sources the emission of the plasma near the black hole is characterized by a power law at X-ray energies during times when the jets are produced. We find that the photon index of this power law, which gives information on the underlying particle distribution, correlates with the characteristic break frequency in the jet spectrum, which is dependent on magnetohydrodynamical processes in the outflow. The observed range in break frequencies varies by five orders of magnitude in sources that span nine orders of magnitude in black hole mass, revealing a similarity of jet properties over a large range of black hole masses powering these jets. This correlation demonstrates that the internal properties of the jet rely most critically on the conditions of the plasma close to the black hole, rather than other parameters such as the black hole mass or spin, and will provide a benchmark that should be reproduced by the jet formation models.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-365162017-09-13T15:30:00Z A Connection Between Plasma Conditions Near Black Hole Event Horizons And Outflow Properties Koljonen, K. Russell, D. Fernández-Ontiveros, J. Markoff, S. Russell, T. Miller-Jones, James Van Der Horst, A. Bernardini, F. Casella, P. Curran, Peter Gandhi, P. Soria, Roberto © 2015. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Accreting black holes are responsible for producing the fastest, most powerful outflows of matter in the universe. The formation process of powerful jets close to black holes is poorly understood, and the conditions leading to jet formation are currently hotly debated. In this paper, we report an unambiguous empirical correlation between the properties of the plasma close to the black hole and the particle acceleration properties within jets launched from the central regions of accreting stellar-mass and supermassive black holes. In these sources the emission of the plasma near the black hole is characterized by a power law at X-ray energies during times when the jets are produced. We find that the photon index of this power law, which gives information on the underlying particle distribution, correlates with the characteristic break frequency in the jet spectrum, which is dependent on magnetohydrodynamical processes in the outflow. The observed range in break frequencies varies by five orders of magnitude in sources that span nine orders of magnitude in black hole mass, revealing a similarity of jet properties over a large range of black hole masses powering these jets. This correlation demonstrates that the internal properties of the jet rely most critically on the conditions of the plasma close to the black hole, rather than other parameters such as the black hole mass or spin, and will provide a benchmark that should be reproduced by the jet formation models. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36516 10.1088/0004-637X/814/2/139 fulltext
spellingShingle Koljonen, K.
Russell, D.
Fernández-Ontiveros, J.
Markoff, S.
Russell, T.
Miller-Jones, James
Van Der Horst, A.
Bernardini, F.
Casella, P.
Curran, Peter
Gandhi, P.
Soria, Roberto
A Connection Between Plasma Conditions Near Black Hole Event Horizons And Outflow Properties
title A Connection Between Plasma Conditions Near Black Hole Event Horizons And Outflow Properties
title_full A Connection Between Plasma Conditions Near Black Hole Event Horizons And Outflow Properties
title_fullStr A Connection Between Plasma Conditions Near Black Hole Event Horizons And Outflow Properties
title_full_unstemmed A Connection Between Plasma Conditions Near Black Hole Event Horizons And Outflow Properties
title_short A Connection Between Plasma Conditions Near Black Hole Event Horizons And Outflow Properties
title_sort connection between plasma conditions near black hole event horizons and outflow properties
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36516