ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Radio constraints on the volume filling factors of AGN winds

54   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل A. J. Blustin
 تاريخ النشر 2009
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The calculation of mass outflow rates of AGN winds is of great importance in understanding the role that such winds play in AGN-galaxy feedback processes. The mass outflow rates are, however, difficult to estimate since the volume filling factors of the winds are unknown. In this paper, we use constraints imposed by the observed radio emission to obtain upper limits to the volume filling factors of wind components in certain nearby AGN. We do this by predicting the 1.4 GHz radio flux densities emitted by those components, assuming a uniform wind, and then comparing these with the observed flux densities for each AGN at this frequency. We find that the upper limits to the volume filling factors are in the range 10^{-4}-0.5.


قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We investigate the relation between the two modes of outflow (wind and jet) in radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN). For this study we have carried out a systematic and homogeneous analysis of XMM-Newton spectra of a sample of 16 suitable radio-lo ud Seyfert-1 AGN. The ionised winds in these AGN are parameterised through high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy and photoionisation modelling. We discover a significant inverse correlation between the column density NH of the ionised wind and the radio-loudness parameter R of the jet. We explore different possible explanations for this NH-R relation and find that ionisation, inclination, and luminosity effects are unlikely to be responsible for the observed relation. We argue that the NH-R relation is rather a manifestation of the magnetic driving mechanism of the wind from the accretion disk. Change in the magnetic field configuration from toroidal to poloidal, powering either the wind or the jet mode of the outflow, is the most feasible explanation for the observed decline in the wind NH as the radio jet becomes stronger. Our findings provide evidence for a wind-jet bimodality in radio-loud AGN and shine new light on the link between these two modes of outflow. This has far-reaching consequences for the accretion disk structure and the wind ejection mechanism.
204 - S. K. Keating 2012
An integral part of the Unified Model for Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) is an axisymmetric obscuring medium, which is commonly depicted as a torus of gas and dust surrounding the central engine. However, a robust, dynamical model of the torus is requ ired in order to understand the fundamental physics of AGNs and interpret their observational signatures. Here we explore self-similar, dusty disk-winds, driven by both magnetocentrifugal forces and radiation pressure, as an explanation for the torus. Using these models, we make predictions of AGN infrared (IR) spectral energy distributions (SEDs) from 2-100 microns by varying parameters such as: the viewing angle; the base column density of the wind; the Eddington ratio; the black hole mass; and the amount of power in the input spectrum emitted in the X-ray relative to that emitted in the UV/optical. We find that models with N_H,0 = 10^25 cm^-2, L/L_Edd = 0.1, and M_BH >= 10^8 Msun are able to adequately approximate the general shape and amount of power expected in the IR as observed in a composite of optically luminous Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) quasars. The effect of varying the relative power coming out in X-rays relative to the UV is a change in the emission below ~5 micron from the hottest dust grains; this arises from the differing contributions to heating and acceleration of UV and X-ray photons. We see mass outflows ranging from ~1-4 Msun/yr, terminal velocities ranging from ~1900-8000 km/s, and kinetic luminosities ranging from ~1x10^42-8x10^43 erg/s. Further development of this model holds promise for using specific features of observed IR spectra in AGNs to infer fundamental physical parameters of the systems.
95 - C.G. Mundell 2011
8.4-GHZ radio imaging study of an optically selected sample of early type Seyfert galaxies; comparison of images taken at two epochs reveals possible variation in the nuclear radio flux density in five of them over a seven year period. It is shown th at there is a possible correlation between the presence of nuclear radio variability and the absence of hundred parsec-scale radio emission, analogous with radio-loud AGN. Our results suggest that all Seyferts may exhibit variation in their nuclear radio flux density at 8.4 GHz, but that variability is more easily recognized in compact sources in which emission from the variable nucleus is not diluted by unresolved, constant flux density radio jet emission within the central 50 pc. Taken in combination with other Seyfert properties, these results suggest a paradigm of intermittent periods of quiescence and nuclear outburst across the Seyfert population and demonstrate the importance of investigating the temporal domain at radio wavelengths, which remains completely unexplored for faint radio-quiet AGN. Discovery of intermittent activity and radio flares has important implications for the AGN duty cycles and the origin of Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays. New radio facilities, such as the EVLA/VLBA, eMERLIN, LOFAR and eVLBI on the EVN, will revolutionise the study of radio-quiet AGN; in particular, the combination of increased sensitivity and sampling rate with high-angular resolution and automatic data reduction will open up the transient radio sky and bring major future breakthroughs.
95 - A. Georgakakis 2011
We explore the evolution with redshift of the rest-frame colours and space densities of AGN hosts (relative to normal galaxies) to shed light on the dominant mechanism that triggers accretion onto supermassive black holes as a function of cosmic time . Data from serendipitous wide-area XMM surveys of the SDSS footprint (XMM/SDSS, Needles in the Haystack survey) are combined with Chandra deep observations in the AEGIS, GOODS-North and GOODS-South to compile uniformly selected samples of moderate luminosity X-ray AGN [L_X(2-10keV) = 1e41-1e44erg/s] at redshifts 0.1, 0.3 and 0.8. It is found that the fraction of AGN hosted by red versus blue galaxies does not change with redshift. Also, the X-ray luminosity density associated with either red or blue AGN hosts remains nearly constant since z=0.8. X-ray AGN represent a roughly fixed fraction of the space density of galaxies of given optical luminosity at all redshifts probed by our samples. In contrast the fraction of X-ray AGN among galaxies of a given stellar mass decreases with decreasing redshift. These findings suggest that the same process or combination of processes for fueling supermassive black holes are in operation in the last 5 Gyrs of cosmic time. The data are consistent with a picture in which the drop of the accretion power during that period (1dex since z=0.8) is related to the decline of the space density of available AGN hosts, as a result of the evolution of the specific star-formation rate of the overall galaxy population. Scenarios which attribute the evolution of moderate luminosity AGN since z approx 1 to changes in the suppermassive black hole accretion mode are not favored by our results.
We present a search for the synchrotron emission from the synchrotron cosmic web by cross correlating 180MHz radio images from the Murchison Widefield Array with tracers of large scale structure (LSS). We use t
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا