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The Dynamical Structure of Nonradiative Black Hole Accretion Flows
Author(s) -
John F. Hawley,
Steven A. Balbus
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the astrophysical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.376
H-Index - 489
eISSN - 1538-4357
pISSN - 0004-637X
DOI - 10.1086/340765
Subject(s) - physics , accretion (finance) , magnetohydrodynamics , magnetorotational instability , astrophysics , outflow , torus , inflow , black hole (networking) , active galactic nucleus , mechanics , magnetohydrodynamic drive , schwarzschild radius , magnetic field , galaxy , geometry , computer network , routing protocol , mathematics , routing (electronic design automation) , quantum mechanics , meteorology , computer science , link state routing protocol
We analyze three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulations of a nonradiative accretion flow around a black hole using a pseudo-Newtonian potential. The flow originates from a torus initially centered at 100 gravitational (Schwarzschild) radii. Accretion is driven by turbulent stresses generated self-consistently by the magnetorotational instability. The resulting flow has three well-defined dynamical components: a hot, thick, rotationally dominated Keplerian disk; a surrounding magnetized corona with vigorous circulation and outflow; and a magnetically confined jet along the centrifugal funnel wall. Inside 10 gravitational radii, the disk becomes very hot, more toroidal, and highly intermittent. These results contrast sharply with quasi-spherical, self-similar viscous models. There are no significant dynamical differences between simulations that include resistive heating and those that do not. We conclude by deducing some simple radiative properties of our solutions, and apply the results to the accretion-powered Galactic center source Sgr A*

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