Regulation of Black Hole Winds and Jets Across the Mass Scale
Ashley L. King, Jon M. Miller, John Raymond, Andy C. Fabian, Chris S., Reynolds, Kayhan Gultekin, Edward M. Cackett, Steven W. Allen, Daniel Proga,, Tim R. Kallman

TL;DR
This study analyzes the mechanical power of winds and jets from black holes across different masses, revealing scaling relations and potential common driving mechanisms, with implications for understanding black hole feedback.
Contribution
It provides a uniform analysis of ionized winds and jets across the black hole mass scale, establishing scaling relations and suggesting a common launching mechanism.
Findings
Wind power scales with bolometric luminosity as log(L_wind) ∝ 1.58 log(L_Bol)
Jet power scales as log(L_Jet) ∝ 1.18 log(L_Bol)
At low Eddington fractions, jets dominate; at high fractions, winds dominate.
Abstract
We present a study of the mechanical power generated by both winds and jets across the black hole mass scale. We begin with the study of ionized X-ray winds and present a uniform analysis using Chandra grating spectra. The high quality grating spectra facilitate the characterization of the outflow velocity, ionization and column density of the absorbing gas. We find that the kinetic power of the winds scales with increasing bolometric luminosity as log(L_wind) \propto (1.58 \pm 0.07) log(L_Bol). This means that SMBH may be more efficient than stellar-mass black holes in launching winds. In addition, the simplicity of the scaling may suggest common driving mechanisms across the mass scale. For comparison, we next examine jet production, estimating jet power based on the energy required to inflate local bubbles. The jet relation is log(L_Jet)\propto (1.18\pm0.24) log(L_Bol). The…
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