Physical Society Colloquium
How Black Holes Shine
Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics University of Toronto
Astrophysical black holes are surrounded by accretion disks, jets, and
coronae consisting of magnetized relativistic plasma. They produce observable
high-energy radiation from nearby the event horizon and it is currently
unclear how this emission is exactly produced. The radiation typically
has a non-thermal component, implying a power-law distribution of emitting
relativistic electrons. Magnetic reconnection and plasma turbulence are viable
mechanisms to tap the large reservoir of magnetic energy in these systems
and accelerate electrons to extreme energies. The accelerated electrons
can then emit high-energy photons that themselves may strongly interact
with the plasma, rendering a highly nonlinear system. Modeling these systems
necessitates a combination of magnetohydrodynamic models to capture the global
dynamics of the formation of dissipation regions, and a kinetic treatment
of plasma processes that are responsible for particle acceleration, quantum
electrodynamics effects like pair creation and annihilation, and radiation. I
will present novel studies of accreting black holes and how they radiate in
regions close to black hole event horizon, using both first-principles general
relativistic kinetic particle-in-cell simulations and global large-scale
three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamics models. With a combination of models,
I determine where and how dissipation of magnetic energy occurs, what kind
of emission signatures are typically produced, and what they can teach us
about the nature of black holes.
Friday, October 6th 2023, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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