
TL;DR
This paper models AGN winds during Eddington accretion, showing they produce observable high-velocity outflows that influence galaxy evolution and black hole growth, aligning with recent X-ray observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that AGN winds are momentum-driven with specific velocities and ionization states, and explains their role in galaxy feedback and black hole mass regulation.
Findings
AGN winds have velocities ~0.1c and ionization parameter ~10^4.
Wind shocks can produce observable cooling emission lines.
Outflows influence SMBH growth and the M–σ relation.
Abstract
I show that Eddington accretion episodes in AGN are likely to produce winds with velocities and ionization parameters up to (cgs), implying the presence of resonance lines of helium-- and hydrogenlike iron. These properties are direct consequences of momentum and mass conservation respectively, and agree with recent X-ray observations of fast outflows from AGN. Because the wind is significantly subluminal, it can persist long after the AGN is observed to have become sub--Eddington. The wind creates a strong cooling shock as it interacts with the interstellar medium of the host galaxy, and this cooling region may be observable in an inverse Compton continuum and lower--excitation emission lines associated with lower velocities. The shell of matter swept up by the (`momentum--driven') shocked wind must propagate beyond the black hole's sphere of influence on…
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