Issue |
A&A
Volume 685, May 2024
|
|
---|---|---|
Article Number | L3 | |
Number of page(s) | 13 | |
Section | Letters to the Editor | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202449956 | |
Published online | 06 May 2024 |
Letter to the Editor
First image of a jet launching from a black hole accretion system: Kinematics
1
1415 Granvia Altamira, Palos Verdes Estates, CA 90274, USA
e-mail: brian.punsly@cox.net
2
ICRANet, Piazza della Repubblica 10 Pescara 65100, Italy and ICRA, Physics Department, University La Sapienza, Roma, Italy
Received:
12
March
2024
Accepted:
13
April
2024
Jets are endemic to both Galactic solar mass and extragalactic supermassive black holes. A recent 86 GHz image of M 87 shows a jet emerging from the accretion ring around a black hole, providing the first direct observational constraint on the kinematics of the jet-launching region in any black hole jetted system. The very wide (∼280 μas), highly collimated, limb-brightened cylindrical jet base is not predicted in current numerical simulations. The emission was shown to be consistent with that of a thick-walled cylindrical source that apparently feeds the flow that produces the bright limbs of the outer jet at an axial distance downstream of 0.4 mas < z < 0.65 mas. The analysis here applies the conservation laws of energy, angular momentum, and magnetic flux to the combined system of the outer jet, the cylindrical jet, and the launch region. It also uses the brightness asymmetries of the jet and counterjet to constrain the Doppler factor. The only global solutions have a source that is located < 34 μas from the event horizon. This includes the Event Horizon Telescope annulus of emission and the regions interior to this annulus. The axial jet begins as a magnetically dominated flow that spreads laterally from the launch radius (< 34 μas). It becomes super-magnetosonic before it reaches the base of the cylindrical jet. The flow is ostensibly redirected and collimated by a cylindrical nozzle formed in a thick accretion disk. The flow emerges from the nozzle as a mildly relativistic (0.3c < v < 0.4c) jet with a significant protonic kinetic energy flux.
Key words: galaxies: active / galaxies: jets
© The Authors 2024
Open Access article, published by EDP Sciences, under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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