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Lepton acceleration in the vicinity of the event horizon: Very-high-energy emissions from super-massive black holes

Authors :
Pak-Hin Thomas Tam
Lupin Chun Che Lin
Kouichi Hirotani
Albert K. H. Kong
Satoki Matsushita
Hung Yi Pu
Keiichi Asada
Hsiang-Kuang Chang
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
arXiv, 2017.

Abstract

Around a rapidly rotating black hole (BH), when the plasma accretion rate is much less than the Eddington rate, the radiatively inefficient accretion flow (RIAF) cannot supply enough MeV photons that are capable of materializing as pairs. In such a charge-starved BH magnetosphere, the force-free condition breaks down in the polar funnels. Applying the pulsar outer-magnetospheric lepton accelerator theory to super-massive BHs, we demonstrate that a strong electric field arises along the magnetic field lines in the direct vicinity of the event horizon in the funnels, that the electrons and positrons are accelerated up to 100~TeV in this vacuum gap, and that these leptons emit copious photons via inverse-Compton (IC) process between 0.1~TeV and 30~TeV for a distant observer. It is found that these IC fluxes will be detectable with Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes, provided that a low-luminosity active galactic nucleus is located within 1~Mpc for a million-solar-mass central BH or within 30~Mpc for a billion-solar-mass central BH. These very-high-energy fluxes are beamed in a relatively small solid angle around the rotation axis because of the inhomogeneous and anisotropic distribution of the RIAF photon field, and show an anti-correlation with the RIAF submillimeter fluxes. The gap luminosity little depends on the three-dimensional magnetic-field configuration, because the Goldreich-Julian charge density, and hence the exerted electric field is essentially governed by the frame-dragging effect, not by the magnetic field configuration.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures; Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1610.07819

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b70ba187b6a34ff81afe68fe2abdb166
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1706.03766