1983
DOI: 10.1007/bf00661152
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The interaction of the stars with accretion disk around the massive black hole in the nuclei of active galaxies and quasars

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Cited by 21 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Ostriker (1983) proposed that the collisions could enhance the viscous drag on the accretion disk. Zentsova (1983) calculated a temperature profile of a bright spot which is created in the place were the star crashes through the disk. She estimates that the maximum local intensity is in the UV band.…”
Section: Particle Acceleration and Jet Launching Near Smbhmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ostriker (1983) proposed that the collisions could enhance the viscous drag on the accretion disk. Zentsova (1983) calculated a temperature profile of a bright spot which is created in the place were the star crashes through the disk. She estimates that the maximum local intensity is in the UV band.…”
Section: Particle Acceleration and Jet Launching Near Smbhmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, objects that cross the disk but are not yet captured can yield EM flares due to disk entry and disk exit. In the latter case, the bow shock temperature from a disk-crossing star is T bow ∼ 10 5 K (v rel /10 2 km s −1 ) 2 and the associated flare luminosity L ∼ 10 38 erg s −1 (v rel /10 2 km s −1 ) 8 (R/R ) 2 (Zentsova 1983;McKernan et al 2014). The O(v 8 rel ) luminosity dependence of disk-crossing flares suggests that higher inclination, large mass stars will produce very luminous, but short-lived flares from disk crossing.…”
Section: Electromagnetic Consequencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this scenario, (magneto) hydrodynamical accretion processes (Noble et al 2021) and kinematic effects such as Doppler boosting (D'Orazio et al 2015) might link the AGN periodicity with the binary properties. In particular, repeated collisions between a smaller binary companion and the accretion disk surrounding the central supermassive black hole have long been discussed as a possible mechanism for quasiperiodic behavior (Zentsova 1983;Lehto & Valtonen 1996;Ivanov et al 1998;Komossa 2006;Dai et al 2010;Linial & Metzger 2023Franchini et al 2023;Pasham et al 2024). Typically, it is proposed that the secondary object is either a star or a smaller mass black hole, which impacts the disk, ejects matter, and/or heats up the disk material via bow shocks.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%