Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2004-03-18
Astron.Astrophys. 421 (2004) 659-666
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
8 pages, including 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
Scientific paper
10.1051/0004-6361:20035955
We study the possibility of a cool disk existing in the Galactic Center in the framework of the disk-corona evaporation/condensation model. Assuming an inactive disk, a hot corona should form above the disk since there is a continuous supply of hot gas from stellar winds of the close-by massive stars. Whether the cool disk can survive depends on the mass exchange between the disk and corona. If the disk-corona interaction is dominated by evaporation and the rate is larger than the Bondi accretion rate in the Galactic Center, the disk will be depleted within a certain time period and no persistent disk will exist. On the other hand, if the interaction results in hot gas steadily condensing into the disk, an inactive cool disk might survive. For this case we further investigate the Bremsstrahlung radiation from the hot corona and compare it with the observed X-ray luminosity. Our model shows that, for standard viscosity in the corona (alpha=0.3), the mass evaporation rate is much higher than the Bondi accretion rate and the coronal density is much larger than that inferred from Chandra observations. An inactive disk can not survive such strong evaporation. For small viscosity (alpha<0.07) we find condensation solutions. But detailed computations show that in this case there is too much X-ray radiation from the corona to be in agreement with the observations. Therefore, we conclude that there should be no thin/inactive disk presently in the Galactic Center. However, we do not exclude that the alternative non-radiative model of Nayakshin (2004) might instead be realized in nature.
Liu B. F.
Meyer Fernand
Meyer-Hofmeister Emmi
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