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Published September 17, 2019 | Submitted
Report Open

Probing the Physical Properties of the Corona in Accreting Black Holes

Abstract

The corona is a key component of most luminous accreting black holes, carrying 5 - 30 % of the power and in non-jetted Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), creating all the X-ray emission above ≃1−2 keV. Its emission illuminates the inner accretion disc, creating the atomic line-rich reflection spectrum used to diagnose and map the accretion flow and measure black hole spin. The corona is likely powered magnetically by the strong differential rotation of the accretion disc and it may be intimately related to relativistic jets. Recent work shows that many black hole coronae may be dominated by electron-positron pairs produced by photon-photon collisions in the compact coronal environment. Despite the corona being an integral component of AGN and black hole binary systems, much is still unknown about the nature of the corona, such as its geometry, location, and the physical mechanisms powering the emission. In this white paper we explore our current understanding of coronal properties, such as its temperature, obtained from measurements with existing hard X-ray telescopes such as NuSTAR, and discuss important questions to be addressed in the coming decade surrounding the nature of the corona. Hard X-ray observations will continue to dispel the mystery of coronae and open up this part of the quasar engine to full understanding.

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