Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

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Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University

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Elementary Process I: Radiative Coulomb Scattering j fb » j ff µ I Z k T ¶ e I z = k T j ff » Z 2 ® f s ¾ T µ k T m e c 2 ¶ 1 = 2 m e c 3 also known as free-free/free-bound or bremsstrahlung

Transcript of Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Page 1: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN

Julian KrolikJohns Hopkins University

Page 2: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Basic Atomic Radiation Processes

Collisions between electrons and individual atoms or ions lead to photon creation

So luminosity Lε = nenH j (T, X; ne,NH)V

Page 3: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Elementary Process I:Radiative Coulomb Scattering

j f b » j f fµ IZkT

¶eI z=kT

j f f » Z2®fs¾Tµ kTmec2

¶1=2mec3

also known as free-free/free-bound or bremsstrahlung

Page 4: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Elementary Process II:Inelastic Scattering + Radiative Relaxation

j a » Z2(²=I Z )µ kTmec2

¶1=2 ¾T®2fsmec3(nX =nH ) exp(¡ ²=kT)

Page 5: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Typical Heat Balance in Photoionized Gases

H ~ FionσioncnHI = IHnenpαrec

C = nenHja ~

tight temperature control, T ~ 1—3 x 104 K because /k ~105 K

Page 6: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Which Atoms and Ions?

Ionization balance:

specific conditions atomic physics

“Ionization parameter”

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Ionization Parameter Also Controls Heavy Element Ionization Balance

recombination time ionization parameter

Measurements of changes in absorption constrain density, ionization state

Page 8: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

A Useful Different Form for the Ionization Parameter

Let ¥ ´ L=(4¼r2cnkT) ' pr=pg

line emission range

Page 9: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Radiative Relaxation Rates

If E1 permitted,

If E1 forbidden, M1 permitted,

If E1, M1 forbidden,

Page 10: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Collisions Can Limit Radiation

Rcoll ~ neπa02vth,e ~ 10-8neT4

1/2 s-1

So collision rate faster than radiation rate when

Presence or absence of forbidden lines directly bounds the density

Page 11: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Relation of Cooling Rates to Abundances

L l =nenxh¾exvi, butIf this line dominates the cooling, any increase in nX/nH simply permits the same heating to be balanced at a lower temperature.So only weak lines are sensitive to abundance---but it’s difficult to measure them well. And ionization corrections can be very model-dependent.

Page 12: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Free-Bound Leads to Recombination CascadeIn H atoms or H-like ions,

So most recombinations at high l

E1 demands Δl = ±1, so most Δn = 1

But ion collisions can drive (n,l) to (n,l’)

Predictable ratios of Hα/Hβ, etc.; departures signal other effects, e.g., extinction, optical depth in the lines,....

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Resonance Lines Can Be Very Optically Thick

But thermal motions can Doppler shift the photon out of resonance:

Page 14: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

At each scatter, the photon energy can shift roughly one thermal width.

The probability that in any single scatter, the photon leaves with such a large frequency offset that its optical depth is < 1 is then

Photon trapping can make collisional deexcitation easier

Large optical depth leads to saturation at the thermal intensity

Page 15: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

K-shell Photoionization = Soft X-ray Opacity

In weakly-ionized, Solarabundancegas, · (²) / ²¡ 3

But as » increases,opacity disappears atlow energy ¯rst

! warmabsorbers

Page 16: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

K-shell Photoionization: Fluorescence

Rate(Auger) / Z3, whileRate(°uorescence) / Z6;°uorescenceprobability ' 0:35 for Fe, Z = 26

hº>K +X ! X +1¤+e¡ !

8<:X +2+2e¡ AugerX +1+e¡ +hºK®°uorescence

hºK ®(F e) = 6:4 keV

Page 17: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

K-shell Opacity + Fe Fluorescence + Compton Recoil Make Compton Reflection

Amplitude and shape of Compton reflection bump constrain solid angle, ionization state of reflector

Page 18: Atomic Radiation Processes in AGN Julian Krolik Johns Hopkins University.

Our Best Diagnostic of the Innermost Disk:Fe K Profiles

a=M = 0:998j / r¡ 1:5 for r > rms