TY - JOUR A1 - Boris Georgiev A1 - Dominic W. Pesce A1 - Avery E. Broderick A1 - Vedant Dhruv A1 - Charles F. Gammie A1 - Chi-Kwan Chan A1 - Koushik Chatterjee A1 - Razieh Emami A1 - Yosuke Mizuno A1 - Roman Gold A1 - Christian M. Fromm A1 - Angelo Ricarte A1 - Doosoo Yoon A1 - Abhishek V. Joshi A1 - Ben Prather A1 - Alejandro Cruz-Osorio A1 - Michael D. Johnson A1 - Oliver Porth A1 - Héctor Olivares A1 - Ziri Younsi A1 - Luciano Rezzolla A1 - Jesse Vos A1 - Richard Qiu A1 - Antonios Nathanail A1 - Ramesh Narayan A1 - Andrew Chael A1 - Richard Anantua A1 - Monika Moscibrodzka A1 - The Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration AB -
We present a framework for characterizing the spatiotemporal power spectrum of the variability expected from the horizon-scale emission structure around supermassive black holes, and we apply this framework to a library of general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulations and associated general relativistic ray-traced images relevant for Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) observations of Sgr A*. We find that the variability power spectrum is generically a red-noise process in both the temporal and spatial dimensions, with the peak in power occurring on the longest timescales and largest spatial scales. When both the time-averaged source structure and the spatially integrated light-curve variability are removed, the residual power spectrum exhibits a universal broken power-law behavior. On small spatial frequencies, the residual power spectrum rises as the square of the spatial frequency and is proportional to the variance in the centroid of emission. Beyond some peak in variability power, the residual power spectrum falls as that of the time-averaged source structure, which is similar across simulations; this behavior can be naturally explained if the variability arises from a multiplicative random field that has a steeper high-frequency power-law index than that of the time-averaged source structure. We briefly explore the ability of power spectral variability studies to constrain physical parameters relevant for the GRMHD simulations, which can be scaled to provide predictions for black holes in a range of systems in the optically thin regime. We present specific expectations for the behavior of the M87* and Sgr A* accretion flows as observed by the EHT.
AU - BT - The Astrophysical Journal Letters IS - L20 LA - eng N2 -We present a framework for characterizing the spatiotemporal power spectrum of the variability expected from the horizon-scale emission structure around supermassive black holes, and we apply this framework to a library of general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulations and associated general relativistic ray-traced images relevant for Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) observations of Sgr A*. We find that the variability power spectrum is generically a red-noise process in both the temporal and spatial dimensions, with the peak in power occurring on the longest timescales and largest spatial scales. When both the time-averaged source structure and the spatially integrated light-curve variability are removed, the residual power spectrum exhibits a universal broken power-law behavior. On small spatial frequencies, the residual power spectrum rises as the square of the spatial frequency and is proportional to the variance in the centroid of emission. Beyond some peak in variability power, the residual power spectrum falls as that of the time-averaged source structure, which is similar across simulations; this behavior can be naturally explained if the variability arises from a multiplicative random field that has a steeper high-frequency power-law index than that of the time-averaged source structure. We briefly explore the ability of power spectral variability studies to constrain physical parameters relevant for the GRMHD simulations, which can be scaled to provide predictions for black holes in a range of systems in the optically thin regime. We present specific expectations for the behavior of the M87* and Sgr A* accretion flows as observed by the EHT.
PY - 2022 SP - 1 EP - 32 T1 - A Universal Power-law Prescription for Variability from Synthetic Images of Black Hole Accretion Flows T2 - The Astrophysical Journal Letters TI - A Universal Power-law Prescription for Variability from Synthetic Images of Black Hole Accretion Flows VL - 930 Y1 - 2022 ER -