HST and Ground-Based Spectroscopy of Quasar Outflows: From Mini-BALs to BALs [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1703.10691


Quasar outflows have been posited as a mechanism to couple super-massive black holes to evolution in their host galaxies. We use multi-epoch spectra from the Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based observatories to study the outflows in seven quasars that have CIV outflow lines ranging from a classic BAL to weaker/narrower “mini-BALs” across rest wavelengths of at least 850 $\AA$ to 1650 $\AA$. The CIV outflow lines all varied within a time frame of $\leq$ 1.9 yrs (rest). This includes equal occurrences of strengthening and weakening plus the emergence of a new BAL system at $-$38,800 km/s accompanied by dramatic strengthening in a mini-BAL at $-$22,800 km/s. We infer from $\sim$1:1 doublet ratios in PV and other lines that the BAL system is highly saturated with line-of-sight covering fractions ranging from 0.27 to 0.80 in the highest to lowest column density regions, respectively. Three of the mini-BALs also provide evidence for saturation and partial covering based on $\sim$1:1 doublet ratios. We speculate that the BALs and mini-BALs form in similar clumpy/filamentary outflows, with mini-BALs identifying smaller or fewer clumps along our lines of sight. If we attribute the line variabilities to clumps crossing our lines of sight at roughly Keplerian speeds, then a typical variability time in our study, $\sim$1.1 yrs, corresponds to a distance $\sim$2 pc from the central black hole. Combining this with the speed and minimum total column density inferred from the PV BAL, $N_H \gtrsim$ 2.5$\times$10$^{22}$ cm$^{-2}$, suggests that the BAL outflow kinetic energy is in the range believed to be sufficient for feedback to galaxy evolution.

Read this paper on arXiv…

E. Moravec, F. Hamann, D. Capellupo, et. al.
Mon, 3 Apr 17
10/38

Comments: 20 pages, 5 figures, accepted to MNRAS for publication