The Fermi Bubbles. I. Possible Evidence for Recent AGN Jet Activity in the Galaxy
Fulai Guo, William G. Mathews (UC Santa Cruz)

TL;DR
The paper presents hydrodynamic simulations suggesting the Fermi Bubbles resulted from a recent, short-lived AGN jet activity in the Milky Way, providing insights into galactic feedback and cosmic ray origins.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent model of jet-induced bubble formation, linking observed gamma-ray features to recent AGN activity in our galaxy.
Findings
Fermi Bubbles can be explained by recent AGN jet activity 1-3 Myr ago.
Jets were moderately light and kinetically dominated, creating fat CR bubbles.
Strong shocks from jets may account for surrounding X-ray features.
Abstract
The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope reveals two large gamma-ray bubbles in the Galaxy, which extend about 50 degrees (~ 10 kpc) above and below the Galactic center (GC) and are symmetric about the Galactic plane. Using axisymmetric hydrodynamic simulations with a self-consistent treatment of the dynamical cosmic ray (CR) - gas interaction, we show that the bubbles can be created with a recent active galactic nucleus (AGN) jet activity about 1 - 3 Myr ago, which was active for a duration of ~ 0.1 - 0.5 Myr. The bipolar jets were ejected into the Galactic halo along the rotation axis of the Galaxy. Near the GC, the jets must be moderately light with a typical density contrast 0.001 <~ \eta <~ 0.1 relative to the ambient hot gas. The jets are energetically dominated by kinetic energy, and over-pressured with either CR or thermal pressure which induces lateral jet expansion, creating fat CR…
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