Speed limits for radiation driven SMBH winds
A. Luminari, F. Nicastro, M. Elvis, E. Piconcelli, F. Tombesi, L., Zappacosta, F. Fiore

TL;DR
This paper examines how special relativity influences the radiation pressure driving ultra-fast outflows in AGNs, revealing that relativistic effects significantly reduce predicted wind velocities and suggesting additional mechanisms are needed for the fastest winds.
Contribution
It introduces relativistic corrections to the radiation-driven wind equations, showing these effects lower wind velocities and impact our understanding of UFO acceleration mechanisms.
Findings
Relativistic effects reduce wind velocities by up to 50%.
Relativistic-corrected velocities are systematically lower than observed.
Additional mechanisms like magnetic driving may be needed for the fastest winds.
Abstract
Ultra Fast Outflows (UFOs) are an established feature in X-ray spectra of AGNs. According to the standard picture, they are launched at accretion disc scales with relativistic velocities, up to 0.3-0.4 c. Their high kinetic power is enough to induce an efficient feedback on galactic-scale, possibly contributing to the co-evolution between the central supermassive black hole (SMBH) and the host galaxy. It is therefore of paramount importance to fully understand the UFO physics, in particular the forces driving their acceleration and the relation with the accretion flow they originate from. In this paper we investigate the impact of special relativity effects on the radiative pressure exerted onto the outflow. The radiation received by the wind decreases for increasing outflow velocity v, implying that the standard Eddington limit argument has to be corrected according to v. Due to the…
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