Pair Plasma Cascade in Rotating Black Hole Magnetospheres with a Split Monopole Flux Model
ORAL
Abstract
An electron-positron cascade in the magnetospheres of Kerr black holes (BHs) is a fundamental ingredient to fueling the relativistic gamma-ray jets seen at the polar regions of galactic supermassive BHs (SMBHs). This leptonic cascade occurs in the spark gap region of a BH magnetosphere where the unscreened electric field parallel to the magnetic field is present; hence, it is affected by the magnetic field structure. Here we explore the case of a quasi-spherical gas distribution, as is expected to be present around the SMBH Sgr A* in the center of our Milky Way galaxy, for example. The properties and efficiency of the leptonic cascade are studied. The findings of our study and the implications for SMBH systems in various spectral and accretion states are discussed. In particular, one finds the efficiency of the cascade in a quasi-spherical gas distribution peaks at the jet axis. Observationally, this should lead to a more prominent jet core, in contrast to the thin disk accretion case, where it peaks around the jet–disk interface. One also finds the spectrum of the background photons plays a key role. The cascade efficiency is maximum for a spectral index of 2, while harder and softer spectra lead to a less efficient cascade.
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Publication: M.C. Sitarz, M.V. Medvedev, A.L. Ford, Pair Plasma Cascade in Rotating Black Hole Magnetospheres with Split Monopole Flux Model, Astrophys. J., 960, 4 (2024); DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ad07d5
Presenters
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Michael C Sitarz
University of Kansas
Authors
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Michael C Sitarz
University of Kansas
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Mikhail V Medvedev
IAS, PU, Harvard, KU, & MIT, IAS, KU, & MIT
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Alexander L Ford
University of Kansas, Northrop Grumman Corp.