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We investigate the electron-positron pair cascade taking place in the magnetosphere of a rapidly rotating black hole. Because of the spacetime frame dragging, the Goldreich-Julian charge density changes sign in the vicinity of the event horizon, which leads to an occurrence of a magnetic-field aligned electric field, in the same way as the pulsar outer-magnetospheric accelerator. In this lepton accelerator, electrons and positrons are accelerated in the opposite directions, to emit copious gamma-rays via the curvature and inverse-Compton processes. We examine a stationary pair cascade, and show that a stellar-mass black hole moving in a gaseous cloud can emit a detectable very-high-energy flux, provided that the black hole is extremely rotating and that the distance is less than about 1 kpc. We argue that the gamma-ray image will have a point-like morphology, and demonstrate that their gamma-ray spectra have a broad peak around 0.01-1 GeV and a sharp peak around 0.1 TeV, that the accelerators become most luminous when the mass accretion rate becomes about 0.01% of the Eddington rate, and that the predicted gamma-ray flux little changes in a wide range of magnetospheric currents. An implication of the stability of such a stationary gap is discussed.
When a black hole accretes plasmas at very low accretion rate, an advection-dominated accretion flow (ADAF) is formed. In an ADAF, relativistic electrons emit soft gamma-rays via Bremsstrahlung. Some MeV photons collide with each other to materialize
The vast majority of pulsars detected by the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) display exponentially cutoff spectra with cutoffs falling in a narrow band around a few GeV. Early spectral modelling predicted spectral cutoffs at energies of up to 100 Ge
The origin of the high energy emission (X-rays and gamma-rays) from black holes is still a matter of debate. We present new evidence that hard X-ray emission in the low/hard state may not be dominated by thermal Comptonization. We present an alternat
Black widow and redback systems are compact binaries in which a millisecond pulsar heats and may even ablate its low-mass companion by its intense wind of relativistic particles and radiation. In such systems, an intrabinary shock can form as a site
Magnetar wind nebulae (MWNe), created by new-born millisecond magnetars, and magnetar giant flares are PeVatron candidates and even potential sources of ultra high energy ($E>10^{18} textrm{ eV}$) cosmic rays (UHECRs). Nonthermal high-energy (HE, $E>