Self-consistent computation of gamma-ray spectra due to proton-proton interactions in black hole systems
Abstract
In the inner regions of an accretion disk around a black hole, relativistic protons can interact with ambient matter to produce electrons, positrons and γ-rays. The resultant steady state electron and positron particle distributions are self-consistently computed taking into account Coulomb and Compton cooling, e-e+ pair production (due to γ-γ annihilation) and pair annihilation. While earlier works used the diffusion approximation to obtain the particle distributions, here we solve a more general integro-differential equation that correctly takes into account the large change in particle energy that occur when the leptons Compton scatter off hard X-rays. Thus this formalism can also be applied to the hard state of black hole systems, where the dominant ambient photons are hard X-rays. The corresponding photon energy spectrum is calculated and compared with broadband data of black hole binaries in different spectral states. The results indicate that the γ-ray spectra (E > 0.8 MeV) of both the soft and hard spectral states and the entire hard X-ray/γ-ray spectrum of the ultra-soft state, could be due to p-p interactions. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that there always exists in these systems a γ-ray spectral component due to p-p interactions which can contribute between 0.5 to 10% of the total bolometric luminosty. The model predicts that GLAST would be able to detect black hole binaries and provide evidence for the presence of non-thermal protons which in turn would give insight into the energy dissipation process and jet formation in these systems.
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