By fitting synthetic spectral models computed via the TLUSTY code, we examine how the spectra from thin accretion disks are expected to vary in accreting black hole systems. We fit color-corrected blackbody models to our synthetic spectra to estimate the spectral hardening factor f , which parameterizes the departure from blackbody and is commonly used to help interpret multitemperature blackbody fitting results. We find we can define a reasonably robust f value to spectra when the effects of Compton scattering dominate radiation transfer. We examine the evolution of f with black hole mass and accretion rate, typically finding a moderate variation ( f ∼ 1.4–2) for accretion rates between 1% and 100% of the Eddington rate. Consistent with most previous work, we find that f tends to increase with accretion rate, but we also infer a weaker correlation of f with black hole mass. We find that f is rarely much larger than 2 unless the disk becomes photon starved, in contention with some previous calculations. Significant spectral hardening ( f > 2) is only found when the disk mass surface density is lower than expected for α -disk models unless α is near unity or larger.
CITATION STYLE
Davis, S. W., & El-Abd, S. (2019). Spectral Hardening in Black Hole Accretion: Giving Spectral Modelers an f. The Astrophysical Journal, 874(1), 23. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab05c5
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