The imprints of AGN feedback within a supermassive black hole's sphere of influence
H.R. Russell, A.C. Fabian, B.R. McNamara, J.M. Miller, P.E.J. Nulsen,, J.M. Piotrowska, C.S. Reynolds

TL;DR
This study uses deep Chandra X-ray observations of M87 to analyze the hot gas properties near its supermassive black hole, revealing multiphase gas, steep density gradients, and evidence for cooling flows that may feed the central cold gas disk.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of hot gas structure and cooling flows within the black hole's sphere of influence, challenging the Bondi accretion model in M87.
Findings
Hot gas is multiphase with temperatures from 0.2 to 1 keV.
Density gradients vary with direction, indicating inflows and outflows.
Cooling gas at ~100 pc may form a mini cooling flow.
Abstract
We present a new 300 ks Chandra observation of M87 that limits pileup to only a few per cent of photon events and maps the hot gas properties closer to the nucleus than has previously been possible. Within the supermassive black hole's gravitational sphere of influence, the hot gas is multiphase and spans temperatures from 0.2 to 1 keV. The radiative cooling time of the lowest temperature gas drops to only 0.1-0.5 Myr, which is comparable to its free fall time. Whilst the temperature structure is remarkably symmetric about the nucleus, the density gradient is steep in sectors to the N and S, with , and significantly shallower along the jet axis to the E, where . The density structure within the Bondi radius is therefore consistent with steady inflows perpendicular to the jet axis and an outflow directed E along the jet axis. By…
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