Supercritical Accretion Flows around Black Holes: Two-dimensional, Radiation Pressure-dominated Disks with Photon Trapping

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© 2005. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Ken Ohsuga et al 2005 ApJ 628 368 DOI 10.1086/430728

0004-637X/628/1/368

Abstract

The quasi-steady structure of supercritical accretion flows around a black hole is studied based on two-dimensional radiation-hydrodynamic (2D-RHD) simulations. The supercritical flow is composed of two parts: the disk region and the outflow regions above and below the disk. Within the disk region the circular motion and the patchy density structure are observed, which is caused by Kelvin-Helmholtz instability and probably by convection. The mass accretion rate decreases inward, roughly in proportion to the radius, and the remaining part of the disk material leaves the disk to form the outflow because of the strong radiation pressure force. We confirm that photon trapping plays an important role within the disk. Thus, matter can fall onto the black hole at a rate exceeding the Eddington rate. The emission is highly anisotropic and moderately collimated so that the apparent luminosity can exceed the Eddington luminosity by a factor of a few in the face-on view. The mass accretion rate onto the black hole increases with the absorption opacity (metallicity) of the accreting matter. This implies that the black hole tends to grow faster in metal-rich regions, such as in starburst galaxies or star-forming regions.

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10.1086/430728