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Context. Magnetically arrested accretion disks (MADs) in black-hole (BH) jet-launching simulations are very successful in modeling low-luminosity active galactic nuclei (AGNs) such as M87*. The Fishbone-Moncrief (FM) torus is well established for this purpose in numerical astrophysics. The extent of the magnetic vector potential inside the FM torus –which we dub the filling factor– has not been studied before in the case of MAD simulations. Aims. In detail, we stress the impact on the jet morphology, efficiency, and linear polarization imprints of the filling factor as a significant initial parameter of these simulations. Methods. We employed five 3D, general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulations initialized with large-scale tori, which are immersed in weak, poloidal magnetic fields. To study the impact of the spatial extent of the initial magnetic field, and hence the magnetic energy content in the torus, we scaled it with the filling factor with regard to the poloidal geometric area of the mass-density distribution. A common choice of the filling factor is complimented and investigated in terms of altered energetics and angular-momentum transport. Further, we investigated the polarized, radiative imprints of synchrotron emission on M87 at 86 GHz, comparing them with very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations. Therefore, we performed general-relativistic, polarized radiative transfer calculations on the GRMHD data, modeling thermal and nonthermal electron distributions. Results. Our simulations show that elevated filling factors significantly increase the electromagnetic (EM) energy contributions and outward angular-momentum transport in the jet due to the initially increased magnetic energy content in the torus. High magnetic fillings exhibit increased linear polarization fractions, agreeing with the observed ∼15% in M87*. We find the jet morphology more prone to disk vertical flux tubes generated by MAD events. We show that GRMHD simulations bracket the jet width measurements at the jet base in M87*. Conclusions. Increased magnetic filling of the FM torus produces jets that are noticeably brighter downstream compared to our reference models; hence, we also find high fillings well suited for extended GRMHD jet models of other low-luminosity AGNs.
Glaser et al. (Thu,) studied this question.