Skip to main content
Home
Department Of Physics text logo
  • Research
    • Our research
    • Our research groups
    • Our research in action
    • Research funding support
    • Summer internships for undergraduates
  • Study
    • Undergraduates
    • Postgraduates
  • Engage
    • For alumni
    • For business
    • For schools
    • For the public
Menu
Theoretical physicists working at a blackboard collaboration pod in the Beecroft building.
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Dr Andrew Mummery

Leverhulme-Peierls Fellow

Sub department

  • Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics

Research groups

  • Pulsars, transients and relativistic astrophysics
  • Theoretical astrophysics and plasma physics at RPC
andrew.mummery@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 210826
Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, room 50.05
  • About
  • Publications

Inspirals from the innermost stable circular orbit of Kerr black holes: exact solutions and universal radial flow

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society 129:16 (2022) 161101

Authors:

Andrew Mummery, Steven Balbus

Abstract:

We present exact solutions of test particle orbits spiraling inward from the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) of a Kerr black hole. Our results are valid for any allowed value of the angular momentum a parameter of the Kerr metric. These solutions are of considerable physical interest. In particular, the radial four-velocity of these orbits is both remarkably simple and, with the radial coordinate scaled by its ISCO value, universal in form, otherwise completely independent of the black hole spin.
More details from the publisher
Details from ORA
More details
More details

Asymptotic Green's function solutions of the general relativistic thin disc equations

(2022)
More details from the publisher
Details from ArXiV

Asymptotic Green’s function solutions of the general relativistic thin disc equations

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 518:2 (2022) 1905-1916

Abstract:

The leading order Green’s function solutions of the general relativistic thin disc equations are computed, using a pseudo-Newtonian potential and asymptotic Laplace mode matching techniques. This solution, valid for a vanishing innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) stress, is constructed by ensuring that it reproduces the leading order asymptotic behaviour of the near-ISCO, Newtonian, and global Wentzel–Kramers–Brillouin limits. Despite the simplifications used in constructing this solution, it is typically accurate, for all values of the Kerr spin parameter a and at all radii, to less than a per cent of the full numerically calculated solutions of the general relativistic disc equations. These solutions will be of use in studying time-dependent accretion discs surrounding Kerr black holes.
More details from the publisher
Details from ORA
More details

The high-energy probability distribution of accretion disc luminosity fluctuations

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 517:3 (2022) 3423-3431

Authors:

Andrew Mummery, Steven Balbus

Abstract:

The probability density function of accretion disc luminosity fluctuations at high observed energies (i.e. energies larger than the peak temperature scale of the disc) is derived, under the assumption that the temperature fluctuations are lognormally distributed. Thin disc theory is used throughout. While lognormal temperature fluctuations would imply that the disc’s bolometric luminosity is also lognormal, the observed Wien-like luminosity behaves very differently. For example, in contrast to a lognormal distribution, the standard deviation of the derived distribution is not linearly proportional to its mean. This means that these systems do not follow a linear rms-flux relationship. Instead they exhibit very high intrinsic variance, and undergo what amounts to a phase transition, in which the mode of the distribution (in the statistical sense) ceases to exist, even for physically reasonable values of the underlying temperature variance. The moments of this distribution are derived using asymptotic expansion techniques. A result that is important for interpreting observations is that the theory predicts that the fractional variability of these disc systems should increase as the observed frequency is increased. The derived distribution will be of practical utility in quantitatively understanding the variability of disc systems observed at energies above their peak temperature scale, including X-ray observations of tidal disruption events.

More details from the publisher
Details from ORA
More details

The high energy probability distribution of accretion disc luminosity fluctuations

(2022)

Authors:

Andrew Mummery, Steven Balbus
More details from the publisher
Details from ArXiV

Pagination

  • Current page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Next page Next
  • Last page Last

Footer Menu

  • Contact us
  • Giving to the Dept of Physics
  • Work with us
  • Media

User account menu

  • Log in

Follow us

FIND US

Clarendon Laboratory,

Parks Road,

Oxford,

OX1 3PU

CONTACT US

Tel: +44(0)1865272200

University of Oxfrod logo Department Of Physics text logo
IOP Juno Champion logo Athena Swan Silver Award logo

© University of Oxford - Department of Physics

Cookies | Privacy policy | Accessibility statement

Built by: Versantus

  • Home
  • Research
  • Study
  • Engage
  • Our people
  • News & Comment
  • Events
  • Our facilities & services
  • About us
  • Current students
  • Staff intranet