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Black hole accretion discs in the canonical low-hard state
Reis, R. C.; Fabian, A. C.; Miller, J. M.
2010-02-21
Citation:Reis, R. C.; Fabian, A. C.; Miller, J. M.; (2010). "Black hole accretion discs in the canonical low-hard state." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 402(2): 836-854. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/78691>
Abstract: Stellar mass black holes in the low-hard state may hold clues to jet formation and basic accretion disc physics, but the nature of the accretion flow remains uncertain. A standard thin disc can extend close to the innermost stable circular orbit, but the inner disc may evaporate when the mass accretion rate is reduced. Blackbody-like continuum emission and dynamically broadened iron emission lines provide independent means of probing the radial extent of the inner disc. Here, we present an X-ray study of eight black holes in the low-hard state. A thermal-disc continuum with a colour temperature consistent with L ∝ T 4 is clearly detected in all eight sources, down to ≈5 × 10 −4 L Edd . In six sources, disc models exclude a truncation radius larger than 10 r g . Iron Kα fluorescence line emission is observed in half of the sample, down to luminosities of ≈1.5 × 10 −3 L Edd . Detailed fits to the line profiles exclude a truncated disc in each case. If strong evidence of truncation is defined as (1) a non-detection of a broad iron line and (2) an inner disc temperature much cooler than expected from the L ∝ T 4 relation, none of the spectra in this sample offers strong evidence of disc truncation. This suggests that the inner disc may evaporate at or below ≈1.5 × 10 −3 L Edd .