Recent X-ray observations have shown evidence for exceptionally broad and skewed iron Kα emission lines from several accreting black hole systems. The lines are assumed to be due to fluorescence of the accretion disc illuminated by a surrounding corona and require a steep emissivity profile increasing into the innermost radius. This appears to question both standard accretion disc theory and the zero-torque assumption for the inner boundary condition, both of which predict a much less extreme profile. Instead it argues that a torque may be present due to magnetic coupling with matter in the plunging region or even to the spinning black hole itself. Discussion so far has centred on the torque acting on the disc. However, the crucial determinant of the iron line profile is the radial variation of the power radiated in the corona. Here we study the effects of different inner boundary conditions on the coronal emissivity and on the profiles of the observable Fe Kα lines. We argue that in the extreme case where a prominent highly redshifted component of the iron line is detected, requiring a steep emissivity profile in the innermost part and a flatter one outside, energy from the gas plunging into the black hole is being fed directly to the corona.
CITATION STYLE
Merloni, A., & Fabian, A. C. (2003). Iron Kα line profiles and the inner boundary condition of accretion flows. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 342(3), 951–961. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-8711.2003.06600.x
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