Publication: Measuring the spins of accreting black holes
Date
2011
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IOP Publishing
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
McClintock, Jeffrey E, Ramesh Narayan, Shane W Davis, Lijun Gou, Akshay Kulkarni, Jerome A Orosz, Robert F Penna, Ronald A Remillard, and James F Steiner. 2011. “Measuring the Spins of Accreting Black Holes.” Classical and Quantum Gravity 28 (11) (May 20): 114009. doi:10.1088/0264-9381/28/11/114009.
Research Data
Abstract
A typical galaxy is thought to contain tens of millions of stellar-mass black holes, the collapsed remnants of once massive stars, and a single nuclear supermassive black hole. Both classes of black holes accrete gas from their environments. The accreting gas forms a flattened orbiting structure known as an accretion disk. During the past several years, it has become possible to obtain measurements of the spins of the two classes of black holes by modeling the x-ray emission from their accretion disks. Two methods are employed, both of which depend upon identifying the inner radius of the accretion disk with the innermost stable circular orbit, whose radius depends only on the mass and spin of the black hole. In the Fe Kα method, which applies to both classes of black holes, one models the profile of the relativistically broadened iron line with a special focus on the gravitationally redshifted red wing of the line. In the continuum-fitting (CF) method, which has so far only been applied to stellar-mass black holes, one models the thermal x-ray continuum spectrum of the accretion disk. We discuss both methods, with a strong emphasis on the CF method and its application to stellar-mass black holes. Spin results for eight stellar-mass black holes are summarized. These data are used to argue that the high spins of at least some of these black holes are natal, and that the presence or absence of relativistic jets in accreting black holes is not entirely determined by the spin of the black hole.
Description
Keywords
Gravitation and cosmology, Astrophysics and astroparticles
Terms of Use
Metadata Only