Constraints on Quasar Accretion Disks from the Optical/Ultraviolet/Soft X-Ray Big Bump (original) (raw)
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Abstract
The simplest accretion-disk models have difficulties explaining the optical/UV/soft-X-ray 'big bump' in quasars. Here more realistic models are investigated, incorporating opacity and inclination effects while retaining an analytic form for ease of computation. It is found that opacity effects can explain the uniform 20,000-30,000 K 'maximum disk temperature' derived by previous workers. The observed spectral turndown would be the result of the onset of electron scattering and should not be identified with the hottest part of the disk. The frequency at which this spectral turndown occurs is only weakly dependent on the accretion-disk parameters. These opacity effects also allow high-frequency EUV and soft-X-ray extensions of the big bump without exceeding the Eddington limit strongly. For a wide range of disk parameters, the EUV spectra of quasar disks should have spectral slopes near -1.
Publication:
The Astrophysical Journal
Pub Date:
October 1987
DOI:
Bibcode:
Keywords:
- Accretion Disks;
- Quasars;
- Spectral Energy Distribution;
- Ultraviolet Spectra;
- Visible Spectrum;
- X Ray Spectra;
- Astronomical Models;
- Astronomical Spectroscopy;
- Constraints;
- Electron Scattering;
- Opacity;
- Astrophysics;
- QUASARS;
- SPECTROPHOTOMETRY