dc.description.abstract |
Accretion disks around black holes are at the heart of much of the activity ob-
served in active galactic nuclei and galactic microquasars. In turn, the structure
of accretion disks is governed by the micro-physical viscosity mechanism that
enables nearby plasma to lose its angular momentum and go accrete onto the
black hole.
In this work, we focus on hot, two-temperature accretion disks where the ions are
collisionless. We study two possible viscosity mechanisms. In the rst model, we
assume a random magnetic eld present throughout the disk and characterize it
using the ion inertial length as magnetic coherence length. In the second model,
we use radial di usion of ions across the large-scale toroidal magnetic eld to
characterize the coe cient of viscosity.
Systems with an accretion disk also often harbor powerful jets that are often
episodic. We attempt to understand the disk-jet connection using the second
model to interpret observations of X-ray variations from active radio galaxy 3C
120. We compare the time scale of the observed variations to the viscous time
scale associated with this particular disk model. We envisage a viscous instability
which results in disk collapse and possible episodic ejections of blobs. Our work
represents the rst attempt to quantify this scenario with a speci c viscosity
model.
xi |
en_US |