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Active Galactic Nuclei Science Fair Projects

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Astronomy Topics

Astronomy is a very broad subject of study. It includes topics related to chemistry, biology and physics, as well as earth science.

Objectives/Goals

The periodicity of X-ray bursts from Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) appears to be dependent on the recovery interval between mass-infall events. This recovery interval is proportional to the speed at which information of the event propagates (speed of sound) and the mass of the central black hole. This project seeks to determine whether the assumed speed of information propagation in an accretion disk can affect mass estimations of the central black hole.

Methods/Materials

A computer simulation was developed to model X-ray emissions from AGN for six different speeds of information propagation (c/100, c/10, c/6, c/3, c/2, and c/1, where c is the speed of light). For a real-time equivalent of one month, the simulation was run with each different speed of propagation and a variety of initial energy states. To find the effect on mass estimation, the simulated light curves were analyzed using a mass-variance relationship.

Results

It was found that lower speeds of propagation had longer time intervals between events and resulted in lower estimates of black hole mass. Additionally, Fourier transforms of the light curves implied a linear relation between speed of propagation and x-ray burst periodicity. The variation time scales are comparable to observed data.

Conclusions/Discussion

The results show that the variability of X-ray emissions is dependent on the speed of perturbations within the disk. The results also show that estimates of black hole mass are reduced when based on slower speeds of sound. It follows that current approximations of central object mass are overestimates by at least a factor of three because they assume that perturbations travel at the speed of light c, while the speed of propagation has an upper limit of c/3. Given the generality of the simulation, more accurate estimates of black hole mass can be calculated by correcting for the speed of sound in accretion disks. 3rd party contributor


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