Electron Heating in Hot Accretion Flows
Astronomy Department, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720; psharma@astro.berkeley.edu, eliot@astro.berkeley.edu
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton, NJ 08543; hammett@pppl.gov
andDepartment of Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544; jstone@astro.princeton.edu
ABSTRACT
Local (shearing box) simulations of the nonlinear evolution of the magnetorotational instability in a collisionless plasma show that angular momentum transport by pressure anisotropy (
, where the directions are defined with respect to the local magnetic field) is comparable to that due to the Maxwell and Reynolds stresses. Pressure anisotropy, which is effectively a large-scale viscosity, arises because of adiabatic invariants related to
and
in a fluctuating magnetic field. In a collisionless plasma, the magnitude of the pressure anisotropy, and thus the viscosity, is determined by kinetic instabilities at the cyclotron frequency. Our simulations show that
50% of the gravitational potential energy is directly converted into heat at large scales by the viscous stress (the remaining energy is lost to grid-scale numerical dissipation of kinetic and magnetic energy). We show that electrons receive a significant fraction [
] of this dissipated energy. Employing this heating by an anisotropic viscous stress in one-dimensional models of radiatively inefficient accretion flows, we find that the radiative efficiency of the flow is greater than 0.5% for
. Thus, a low accretion rate, rather than just a low radiative efficiency, is necessary to explain the low luminosity of many accreting black holes. For Sgr A* in the Galactic center, our predicted radiative efficiencies imply an accretion rate of ≈
and an electron temperature of ≈
at ≈10 Schwarzschild radii; the latter is consistent with the brightness temperature inferred from VLBI observations.
Received 2007 March 20; accepted 2007 June 11
Subject headings:
accretion, accretion disks—Galaxy: center—MHD—plasmas
Cited by
Online publication date: 1-Aug-2008.
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Online publication date: 20-Dec-2007.
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