AGN-driven outflows in clumpy media: multiphase structure and scaling relations
Samuel Ruthven Ward, Tiago Costa, Chris M. Harrison, Vincenzo Mainieri

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to explore how the clumpy structure of the interstellar medium affects the multiphase nature and scaling relations of AGN-driven outflows, revealing complex interactions and observational implications.
Contribution
It presents detailed numerical experiments showing the impact of ISM clumpiness on outflow phases, momentum fluxes, and scaling relations, advancing understanding of AGN feedback mechanisms.
Findings
Clumpy ISM leads to long-lived cold cloudlets in outflows.
Cold phase dominates mass, hot phase carries most kinetic energy.
Outflows may appear momentum-driven but are energy-driven, affecting observational classification.
Abstract
Small-scale winds driven from accretion discs surrounding active galactic nuclei (AGN) are expected to launch kpc-scale outflows into their host galaxies. However, the ways in which the structure of the interstellar medium (ISM) affects the multiphase content and impact of the outflow remains uncertain. We present a series of numerical experiments featuring a realistic small-scale AGN wind with velocity interacting with an isolated galaxy disc with a manually-controlled clumpy ISM, followed at sub-pc resolution. Our simulations are performed with AREPO and probe a wide range of AGN luminosities () and ISM substructures. In homogeneous discs, the AGN wind sweeps up an outflowing, cooling shell, where the emerging cold phase dominates the mass and kinetic energy budgets, reaching a momentum flux . However,…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
