Continuum Acceleration of Black Hole Winds

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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5 pages, 4 figures, accepted to ApJL

Scientific paper

10.1086/425980

Motivated by recent observations of high-velocity, highly ionized winds in several QSOs, models of purely continuum-driven winds launched from approximately 200 GM_{BH}/c^2 are presented. Launching conditions are investigated, as well as the observational signatures for a variety of initial conditions and illuminating continua. While we verify that continuum-driven, highly-ionized outflows reach the observed velocities for L/L_{Edd} >~ 1, independent of the incident spectral shape, such winds are too highly ionized to exhibit the observed absorption features when launched with an AGN continuum (in fact, such winds are so ionized that they are driven primarily by electron scattering). If the wind is instead illuminated with a blackbody continuum originating from an optically thick shield, the gas is too weakly ionized and does not produce high energy absorption features. If high-velocity, high-ionization winds are truly launched from very near the black hole, such winds must be launched under other conditions or via other processes; we summarize some possibilities.

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