Study of the generation of wind and its subsequent driving by the radiation from the diffuse material in spiral motion around a massive central body
Fig: Launching of wind. Density contour in log scale and velocity vectors (arrows). The green portion is the disc and some matter settling over the disc. Each snapshot corresponds to time t= 2 (a), 6 (b) and 62 (c) in units of 0.0512 seconds. The accretion rate is 4.3X1018 gm/s around 10 solar mass black hole.
As gas and dust fall toward a black hole, they form a disk around it. As material piles up in the disk, it heats up to temperatures in excess of millions of degrees. A fraction of this infalling matter is ejected in the form of winds. Scientists have tracked the generation of this wind and how it is driven by the disc of diffused swirling materials around the black hole called an accretion disc. Matter flowing out due to the wind should contaminate the environment play a major role in the evolution of the region harbouring these black holes. Therefore, how such a process can be triggered need to be ascertained. By blowing dense gas from the galactic nucleus and by halting inward flows from the galactic halo, the winds play a vital role in shaping the evolution of the black hole host galaxy. Hence the mechanism of generation of these winds and what drives them has intrigued scientists for a long as it helps them explore host galaxies. Scientists from Aryabhatta Research Institute of observational sciences (ARIES), an autonomous institute under the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Govt. of India, in collaboration with scientists from other institutions, undertook a time-dependent study of the generation of wind and its subsequent driving by the radiation from the diffuse material in spiral motion around a massive central body called the black hole accretion disc using numerical simulation techniques developed indigenously.
The scientists tried to figure out whether driving of the wind by radiation flux can dominate the radiation drag effect. They showed that luminous discs can produce winds up to speeds which is about ten percent of the speed of light, and also that these winds originated from regions close to the central black hole. Radiation drag plays a key role in reducing the speed of light. For less bright discs, radiation drag quenches the wind completely. The research has recently been accepted for publication in the scientific journal Monthly Notices of Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS).
Source: PIB release