Secularly powered outflows from AGN: the dominance of non-merger driven supermassive black hole growth
Rebecca Smethurst, Brooke Simmons, Chris Lintott, Jesse Shanahan

TL;DR
This study shows that secular, non-merger processes can efficiently fuel supermassive black hole growth and drive outflows in disk-dominated galaxies, challenging the merger-centric view of galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that secular processes alone can sustain SMBH growth and outflows, highlighting the importance of non-merger mechanisms in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Outflows detected in 10 of 12 merger-free galaxies.
AGN outflow rates are about 18 times higher than SMBH accretion rates.
Disk-dominated galaxies show higher black hole accretion rates than merger-driven systems.
Abstract
Recent observations and simulations have revealed the dominance of secular processes over mergers in driving the growth of both supermassive black holes (SMBH) and galaxy evolution. Here we obtain narrowband imaging of AGN powered outflows in a sample of galaxies with disk-dominated morphologies, whose history is assumed to be merger-free. We detect outflows in sources in narrow band imaging of the [OIII] emission using filters on the Shane-3m telescope. We calculate a mean outflow rate for these AGN of . This exceeds the mean accretion rate of their SMBHs ) by a factor of . Assuming that the galaxy must provide at least enough material to power both the AGN and the outflow, this gives a lower limit on the average inflow rate of…
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