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Bal QSOS and extreme UFOs: the Eddington connection
journal contribution
posted on 2016-05-18, 10:29 authored by Kastytis Zubovas, Andrew KingWe suggest a common physical origin connecting the fast, highly ionized winds (UFOs) seen in nearby active galactic nuclei (AGNs), and the slower and less ionized winds of broad absorption line (BAL) QSOs. The primary difference is the mass-loss rate in the wind, which is ultimately determined by the rate at which mass is fed toward the central supermassive black hole (SMBH) on large scales. This is below the Eddington accretion rate in most UFOs, and slightly super-Eddington in extreme UFOs such as PG1211+143, but ranges up to ~10-50 times this in BAL QSOs. For UFOs this implies black hole accretion rates and wind mass-loss rates which are at most comparable to Eddington, giving fast, highly ionized winds. In contrast, BAL QSO black holes have mildly super-Eddington accretion rates, and drive winds whose mass-loss rates are significantly super-Eddington, and so are slower and less ionized. This picture correctly predicts the velocities and ionization states of the observed winds, including the recently discovered one in SDSS J1106+1939. We suggest that luminous AGNs may evolve through a sequence from BAL QSO through LoBAL to UFO-producing Seyfert or quasar as their Eddington factors drop during the decay of a bright accretion event. LoBALs correspond to a short-lived stage in which the AGN radiation pressure largely evacuates the ionization cone, but before the large-scale accretion rate has dropped to the Eddington value. We show that sub-Eddington wind rates would produce an M-σ relation lying above that observed. We conclude that significant SMBH mass growth must occur in super-Eddington phases, either as BAL QSOs, extreme UFOs, or obscured from direct observation.
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Citation
Astrophysical Journal, 2013, 769:51Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and AstronomyVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
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Astrophysical JournalPublisher
IOP Publishingissn
0004-637Xeissn
1538-4357Copyright date
2013Available date
2016-05-18Publisher DOI
Publisher version
http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0004-637X/769/1/51/metaLanguage
enAdministrator link
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Keywords
Science & TechnologyPhysical SciencesAstronomy & AstrophysicsASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICSaccretion, accretion disksblack hole physicsgalaxies: evolutionquasars: generalULTRA-FAST OUTFLOWSVELOCITY IONIZED OUTFLOWABSORPTION-LINE QUASARSACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEISOFT-X-RAYM-BH-SIGMAWARM ABSORBERSBLACK-HOLESIONIZATION EQUILIBRIUMMOLECULAR OUTFLOWS