English

The Accretion Geometry in Radio-Loud Active Galaxies

Astrophysics 2008-11-26 v1

Abstract

We review the latest attempts to determine the accretion geometry in radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN). These objects, which comprise ~10-20% of the AGN population, produce powerful collimated radio jets that can extend thousands of parsecs from the center of the host galaxy. Recent multiwavelength surveys have shown that radio-loudness is more common in low-luminosity AGN than in higher luminosity Seyfert galaxies or quasars. These low-luminosity AGN have small enough accretion rates that they are most likely accreting via a geometrically thick and radiatively inefficient accretion flow. In contrast, X-ray spectroscopic observations of three higher luminosity broad-line radio galaxies (3C 120, 4C+74.26 and PG 1425+267) have found evidence for an untruncated thin disk extending very close to the black hole. These tentative detections indicate that, for this class of radio-loud AGN, the accretion geometry is very similar to their radio-quiet counterparts. These observations suggest that there are three conditions to jet formation that must be satisfied: the presence of a rapidly spinning black hole, an accretion flow with a large H/r ratio, and a favorable magnetic field geometry.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0707.3142,
  title  = {The Accretion Geometry in Radio-Loud Active Galaxies},
  author = {D. R. Ballantyne},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0707.3142},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

15 pages, invited review, accepted by Modern Physics Letters A

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