No Arabic abstract
The formation of quasar broad-line region (BLR) clouds via thermal instability in the presence of Alfven heating has been discussed by Goncalves et al. (1993a, 1996). In particular, these studies showed the relevance of Alfven heating in establishing the stability of BLR clouds in the intercloud medium. The present paper shows the results of time-dependent calculations (we use a time-dependent hydrodynamic code) following the evolution of BLR clouds, since their formation from the 10^7 K intercloud medium. We also calculate the UV and optical line emission associated with the clouds in order to compare with observations. Our results are compared with those of UV and optical monitoring of well-studied AGN, which suggest that the BLR is most probably composed of at least two different regions, each one giving rise to a kind of line variability, since low- and high-ionization lines present different patterns of variability. We discuss the alternative scenario in which lines of different ionization could be formed at the same place but heated/excited by distinct mechanisms, considering as a non-radiative mechanism the Alfven heating.
Apart from viewing-dependent obscuration, intrinsic broad-line emission from active galactic nuclei (AGNs) follows an evolutionary sequence: Type $1 to 1.2/1.5 to 1.8/1.9 to 2$ as the accretion rate onto the central black hole is decreasing. This spectral evolution is controlled, at least in part, by the parameter $L_{rm bol}/M^{2/3}$, where $L_{rm bol}$ is the AGN bolometric luminosity and $M$ is the black hole mass. Both this dependence and the double-peaked profiles that emerge along the sequence arise naturally in the disk-wind scenario for the AGN broad-line region.
We present a new sample of 116 double-peaked Balmer line Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Double-peaked emission lines are believed to originate in the accretion disks of AGN, a few hundred gravitational radii (Rg) from the supermassive black hole. We investigate the properties of the candidate disk emitters with respect to the full sample of AGN over the same redshifts, focusing on optical, radio and X-ray flux, broad line shapes and narrow line equivalent widths and line flux-ratios. We find that the disk-emitters have medium luminosities (~10^44erg/s) and FWHM on average six times broader than the AGN in the parent sample. The double-peaked AGN are 1.6 times more likely to be radio-sources and are predominantly (76%) radio quiet, with about 12% of the objects classified as LINERs. Statistical comparison of the observed double-peaked line profiles with those produced by axisymmetric and non-axisymmetric accretion disk models allows us to impose constraints on accretion disk parameters. The observed Halpha line profiles are consistent with accretion disks with inclinations smaller than 50 deg, surface emissivity slopes of 1.0-2.5, outer radii larger than ~2000 Rg, inner radii between 200-800Rg, and local turbulent broadening of 780-1800 km/s. The comparison suggests that 60% of accretion disks require some form of asymmetry (e.g., elliptical disks, warps, spiral shocks or hot spots).
Broad emission lines in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) mainly arise from gas photoionized by continuum radiation from an accretion disk around a central black hole. The shape of the broad-line profile, described by ${cal D}_{_{rm Hbeta}}={rm FWHM}/sigma_{_{rm Hbeta}}$, the ratio of full width at half maximum to the dispersion of broad H$beta$, reflects the dynamics of the broad-line region (BLR) and correlates with the dimensionless accretion rate ($dot{mathscr{M}}$) or Eddington ratio ($L_{rm bol}/L_{rm Edd}$). At the same time, $dot{mathscr{M}}$ and $L_{rm bol}/L_{rm Edd}$ correlate with ${cal R}_{rm Fe}$, the ratio of optical Fe II to H$beta$ line flux emission. Assembling all AGNs with reverberation mapping measurements of broad H$beta$, both from the literature and from new observations reported here, we find a strong bivariate correlation of the form $log(dot{mathscr{M}},L_{rm bol}/L_{rm Edd})=alpha+beta{cal D}_{_{rm Hbeta}}+gamma{cal R}_{rm Fe},$ where $alpha=(2.47,0.31)$, $beta=-(1.59,0.82)$ and $gamma=(1.34,0.80)$. We refer to this as the fundamental plane of the BLR. We apply the plane to a sample of $z < 0.8$ quasars to demonstrate the prevalence of super-Eddington accreting AGNs are quite common at low redshifts.
We reinvestigate the relationship between the characteristic broad-line region size (R_blr) and the Balmer emission-line, X-ray, UV, and optical continuum luminosities. Our study makes use of the best available determinations of R_blr for a large number of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) from Peterson et al. Using their determinations of R_blr for a large sample of AGNs and two different regression methods, we investigate the robustness of our correlation results as a function of data sub-sample and regression technique. Though small systematic differences were found depending on the method of analysis, our results are generally consistent. Assuming a power-law relation R_blr propto L^alpha, we find the mean best-fitting alpha is about 0.67+/-0.05 for the optical continuum and the broad Hbeta luminosity, about 0.56+/-0.05 for the UV continuum luminosity, and about 0.70+/-0.14 for the X-ray luminosity. We also find an intrinsic scatter of about 40% in these relations. The disagreement of our results with the theoretical expected slope of 0.5 indicates that the simple assumption of all AGNs having on average same ionization parameter, BLR density, column density, and ionizing spectral energy distribution, is not valid and there is likely some evolution of a few of these characteristics along the luminosity scale.
Most results of the reverberation monitoring of active galaxies showed a universal scaling of the time delay of the Hbeta emission region with the monochromatic flux at 5100 A, with very small dipersion. Such a scaling favored the dust-based formation mechanism of the Broad Line Region (BLR). Recent reverberation measurements showed that actually a significant fraction of objects exhibits horter lags than the previously found scaling. Here we demonstrate that these shorter lags can be explained by the old concept of scaling of the BLR size with the ionization parameter. Assuming a universal value of this parameter and universal value of the cloud density reproduces the distribution of observational points in the time delay vs. monochromatic flux plane, provided that a range of black hole spins is allowed. However, a confirmation of the new measurements for low/moderate Eddington ratio sources is strongly needed before the dust-based origin of the BLR can be excluded.