论文标题
由于活性银河核积聚磁盘,由于伽马射线爆发引起的时间变量吸收的影响
The effects of Time-Variable Absorption due to Gamma-Ray Bursts In Active Galactic Nuclei Accretion Disks
论文作者
论文摘要
预计在活性银河核(AGN)积聚磁盘的密集环境中,长γ射线爆发(GRB)都会发生。当这些爆发通过它们所居住的磁盘传播时,它们将介质化为介质,从而导致时间依赖性的不透明度,从而导致瞬态具有独特的光谱演化。在本文中,我们使用视线辐射传输代码耦合金属和尘埃演化来模拟在长和短GRB的情况下发生的时间依赖性吸收。通过这些模拟,我们调查了密集环境在爆发上留下可能可观察到的烙印的参数空间。我们的数值调查表明,在长期GRB的情况下,预计中央超级质量黑洞块的时间依赖性光谱演化有望在$ 10^5 $和$ 5 \ times 10^7 $太阳能之间,而在短GRB的情况下则是$ 10^4 $和$ 10^4 $太阳能。我们的发现可以通过其独特的光谱进化和中心位置来识别在AGN磁盘环境中爆炸的爆发。此外,一旦建立了AGN的识别,对时间依赖性进化的研究将允许研究磁盘结构。最后,我们的发现使GRB是否有助于AGN排放以及哪种发现有助于回答GRB是否可以成为某些尚未解释的AGN时间可变性的原因的问题。
Both long and short gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are expected to occur in the dense environments of active galactic nuclei (AGN) accretion disks. As these bursts propagate through the disks they live in, they photoionize the medium causing time-dependent opacity that results in transients with unique spectral evolution. In this paper we use a line-of-sight radiation transfer code coupling metal and dust evolution to simulate the time-dependent absorption that occurs in the case of both long and short GRBs. Through these simulations, we investigate the parameter space in which dense environments leave a potentially observable imprint on the bursts. Our numerical investigation reveals that time dependent spectral evolution is expected for central supermassive black hole masses between $10^5$ and $5 \times 10^7$ solar masses in the case of long GRBs, and between $10^4$ and $10^7$ solar masses in the case of short GRBs. Our findings can lead to the identification of bursts exploding in AGN disk environments through their unique spectral evolution coupled with a central location. In addition, the study of the time-dependent evolution would allow for studying the disk structure, once the identification with an AGN has been established. Finally, our findings lead to insight into whether GRBs contribute to the AGN emission, and which kind, thus helping to answer the question of whether GRBs can be the cause of some of the as-of-yet unexplained AGN time variability.