The Physics and Physical Properties of Quasar Outflows
Fred Hamann, Daniel Capellupo, George Chartas, Sean McGraw, Paola, Rodriguez Hidalgo, Joseph Shields, Jane Charlton, Michael Eracleous

TL;DR
This paper investigates the physical properties and acceleration mechanisms of quasar outflows, finding that mini-BALs are likely dense, small, and not radiatively shielded, with implications for understanding quasar feedback.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence that mini-BAL outflows are dense, thin, and lack significant radiative shielding, challenging existing models of quasar outflow acceleration.
Findings
Mini-BALs have high gas densities (~4x10^8 cm^-3) and small radial thickness (<3x10^13 cm).
X-ray absorption is weak or absent, indicating radiative shielding is not necessary.
Strong PV absorption lines suggest large column densities (>10^22 cm^-2) in high-redshift BALs.
Abstract
We describe two studies designed to characterize the total column densities, kinetic energies, and acceleration physics of broad absorption line (BAL) outflows in quasars. The first study uses new Chandra X-ray and ground-based rest-frame UV observations of 7 quasars with mini-BALs at extreme high speeds, in the range 0.1c to 0.2c, to test the idea that strong radiative shielding is needed to moderate the mini-BAL ionizations and facilitate their acceleration to extreme speeds. We find that the X-ray absorption is weak or absent, with generally N_H < few x 10^22 mc^-2, and that radiative shielding is not important. We argue that the mini-BAL ionizations are controlled, instead, by high gas densities of order n_H ~ 4 x 10^8 cm^-3 in small outflow substructures. If we conservatively assume that the total column density in the mini-BAL gas is N_H < 10^22 cm^-2, covering >15% of the UV…
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