Quasar feedback revealed by giant molecular outflows
Chiara Feruglio, Roberto Maiolino, Enrico Piconcelli, Nicola Menci,, Herve' Aussel, Alessandra Lamastra, Fabrizio Fiore

TL;DR
This paper presents direct observational evidence of a giant molecular outflow in Mrk 231, demonstrating quasar feedback's role in galaxy evolution by expelling cold gas and quenching star formation.
Contribution
First direct detection of a large-scale molecular outflow driven by quasar activity in Mrk 231, linking quasar feedback to galaxy evolution models.
Findings
Detected broad CO wings indicating a giant molecular outflow of ~700 solar masses per year.
Outflow velocity up to 750 km/s, capable of expelling cold gas in ~10 million years.
Outflow kinetic energy consistent with models of radiatively accelerated nuclear winds.
Abstract
In the standard scenario for galaxy evolution young star-forming galaxies transform into red bulge-dominated spheroids, where star formation has been quenched. To explain such a transformation, a strong negative feedback generated by accretion onto a super-massive black hole is often invoked. The depletion of gas resulting from quasar-driven outflows should eventually stop star-formation in the host galaxy and lead the black hole to "suicide" for starvation. Direct observational evidence for a major quasar feedback onto the host galaxy is still missing, since outflows previously observed in quasars are generally associated with the ionized component of the gas, which only accounts for a minor fraction of the total gas content, and typically occurring in the central regions. We used the IRAM PdB Interferometer to observe CO(1-0) in Mrk 231, the closest QSO known. Thanks to the wide band…
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