Radiation Pressure Confinement -- III. The origin of the broad ionization distribution in AGN outflows
Jonathan Stern, Ehud Behar, Ari Laor, Alexei Baskin, and Tomer Holczer

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that radiation pressure compression naturally explains the broad ionization distribution observed in AGN outflows, aligning well with empirical absorption measure distributions across various conditions.
Contribution
It shows that radiation pressure compression can account for the broad ionization range in AGN winds, providing a unified physical explanation for observed absorption features.
Findings
RPC produces AMD similar to observations
The model's parameters are weakly dependent on physical conditions
RPC predicts increasing gas pressure with decreasing ionization
Abstract
The winds of ionized gas driven by Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) can be studied through absorption lines in their X-ray spectra. A recurring feature of these outflows is their broad ionization distribution, including essentially all ionization levels (e.g., Fe^0+ to Fe^25+). This characteristic feature can be quantified with the absorption measure distribution (AMD), defined as the distribution of column density with ionization parameter |dN / dlog xi|. Observed AMDs extend over 0.1 < xi < 10^4 (cgs), and are remarkably similar in different objects. Power-law fits (|dN /dlog xi| ~ N_1 xi^a) yield N_1 = 3x10^{21} cm^-2 +- 0.4 dex and a = 0 -- 0.4. What is the source of this broad ionization distribution, and what sets the small range of observed and ? A common interpretation is a multiphase outflow, with a wide range of gas densities in a uniform gas pressure medium. However, the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
