Abstract

Abstract The black hole images obtained with the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) are expected to be variable at the dynamical timescale near their horizons. For the black hole at the center of the M87 galaxy, this timescale (5–61 days) is comparable to the 6 day extent of the 2017 EHT observations. Closure phases along baseline triangles are robust interferometric observables that are sensitive to the expected structural changes of the images but are free of station-based atmospheric and instrumental errors. We explored the day-to-day variability in closure-phase measurements on all six linearly independent nontrivial baseline triangles that can be formed from the 2017 observations. We showed that three triangles exhibit very low day-to-day variability, with a dispersion of ∼3°–5°. The only triangles that exhibit substantially higher variability (∼90°–180°) are the ones with baselines that cross the visibility amplitude minima on the u–v plane, as expected from theoretical modeling. We used two sets of general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations to explore the dependence of the predicted variability on various black hole and accretion-flow parameters. We found that changing the magnetic field configuration, electron temperature model, or black hole spin has a marginal effect on the model consistency with the observed level of variability. On the other hand, the most discriminating image characteristic of models is the fractional width of the bright ring of emission. Models that best reproduce the observed small level of variability are characterized by thin ring-like images with structures dominated by gravitational lensing effects and thus least affected by turbulence in the accreting plasmas.

Highlights

  • The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) has produced horizonscale images of the black hole in the center of the M87 galaxy using Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) at a wavelength of 1.3 mm (EHT Collaboration et al 2019a, 2019b, 2019c, 2019d, 2019e, 2019f)

  • We studied the variability of the black hole image structure of M87 at timescales comparable to the fastest dynamical timescale near the horizon, as it is imprinted on the closure phases measured during the EHT 2017 observations

  • We identified three linearly independent closure triangles that exhibit a persistent evolution pattern of closure phases over the course of each night of observation but show little variation around this pattern across the six days of observations, namely, Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA)-Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT)-Submillimeter Telescope Observatory (SMT), ALMA-Pico Veleta (PV)-SMT, and ALMA-PV-LMT

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Summary

13. ISSN 0004-637X

It is advisable to refer to the publisher’s version if you intend to cite from the work. J. Tilanus16,26,114,115 , Michael Titus , Kenji Toma116,117 , Pablo Torne11,108 , Efthalia Traianou , Tyler Trent, Sascha Trippe118 , Ilse van Bemmel , Huib Jan van Langevelde76,119 , Daniel R. van Rossum , Jan Wagner , Derek Ward-Thompson120 , John Wardle121 , Jonathan Weintroub4,5 , Norbert Wex , Robert Wharton , Kaj Wiik122, Qingwen Wu (吴庆文)123 , Doosoo Yoon , André Young , Ken Young , Ziri Younsi43,124 , Feng Yuan (袁峰)39,65,125 , Ye-Fei Yuan (袁业飞)126 , J. Cornell Center for Astrophysics and Planetary Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 80 Nandan Road, Shanghai 200030, Peoples Republic of China. Key Laboratory of Radio Astronomy, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, Peoples Republic of China Physics Department, Fairfield University, 1073 North Benson Road, Fairfield, CT 06824, USA. Niigata University, 8050 Ikarashi-nino-cho, Nishi-ku, Niigata 950-2181, Japan Physics Department, National Sun Yat-Sen University, No 70, Lien-Hai Road, Kaosiung City 80424, Taiwan, R.O.C. National Optical Astronomy Observatory, 950 N.

Introduction
Closure-phase Observations of M87
GRMHD Simulations and Library
Closure-phase Variability in GRMHD Simulations
Closure-phase Variability and Compliance Fractions
Comparison of GRMHD Simulations to M87 Observations
Discussion
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