Extreme-Velocity Quasar Outflows and the Role of X-ray Shielding
Fred Hamann, George Chartas, Sean McGraw, Paola Rodriguez Hidalgo,, Joseph Shields, Daniel Capellupo, Jane Charlton, Michael Eracleous

TL;DR
This study investigates whether extreme-velocity mini-BAL quasar outflows require strong X-ray shielding for acceleration, finding instead that high gas densities in small clouds likely enable these outflows without significant shielding.
Contribution
It demonstrates that mini-BAL outflows at high speeds do not depend on strong X-ray shielding, supporting models with magnetic confinement and small, dense clouds.
Findings
Weak or moderate X-ray absorption in mini-BALs at 0.1c-0.2c speeds.
High gas densities in small clouds explain ionization levels without shielding.
Outflow cloud structures resemble thin pancakes or dense cloud sprays.
Abstract
Quasar accretion disk winds observed via broad absorption lines (BALs) in the UV produce strong continuous absorption in X-rays. The X-ray absorber is believed to serve critically as a radiative shield to enable radiative driving. However, "mini-BAL" and narrow absorption line outflows have dramatically less X-ray absorption than BALs. Here we examine X-ray and rest-frame UV spectra of 8 mini-BAL quasars with outflow speeds in the range 0.1c to 0.2c to test whether extreme speeds require a strong shield. We find that the X-ray absorption is weak or moderate, with neutral-equivalent column densities N_H < few times 10^22 cm^-2, consistent with mini-BALs at lower speeds. We use photoionization models to show that this amount of shielding is too weak to control the outflow ionizations and, therefore, it is not important for the acceleration. Shielding in complex geometries also seems…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
