The WISSH quasars project VII. The impact of extreme radiative field in the accretion disk and X-ray corona interplay
L. Zappacosta, E. Piconcelli, M. Giustini, G. Vietri, F. Duras, G., Miniutti, M. Bischetti, A. Bongiorno, M. Brusa, M. Chiaberge, A. Comastri, C., Feruglio, A. Luminari, A. Marconi, C. Ricci, C. Vignali, F. Fiore

TL;DR
This study investigates hyperluminous quasars, revealing a correlation between strong accretion disc winds and reduced X-ray luminosity, suggesting X-ray shielding influences wind launching and coronal activity.
Contribution
It uncovers a novel link between CIV wind velocities and X-ray luminosity in hyperluminous quasars, supporting models where X-ray shielding affects wind dynamics.
Findings
Fast winds correlate with lower X-ray luminosity.
No dependence of X-ray luminosity on UV, MIR, or bolometric luminosity.
X-ray shielding may influence wind launching and coronal emission.
Abstract
Hyperluminous quasars ( erg s) are ideal laboratories to study the interaction and impact of extreme radiative field and the most powerful winds in the AGN nuclear regions. They typically exhibit low coronal X-ray luminosity () compared to the UV and MIR radiative outputs ( and ) with a non-negligible fraction of them reporting even 1 dex weaker compared to the prediction of the well established - and - relations followed by the bulk of the AGN population. We report in our WISE/SDSS-selected Hyperluminous (WISSH) broad-line quasar sample, the discovery of a dependence between the intrinsic 2-10 keV luminosity () and the blueshifted velocity of the CIV emission line () indicative of accretion disc winds. In particular,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
