Powerful Outflows and Feedback from Active Galactic Nuclei
Pounds, Ken; King, Andrew
United Kingdom
Abstract
Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) represent the growth phases of the supermassive black holes in the center of almost every galaxy. Powerful, highly ionized winds, with velocities â¼0.1-0.2c, are a common feature in X-ray spectra of luminous AGNs, offering a plausible physical origin for the well-known connections between the hole and properties of its host. Observability constraints suggest that the winds must be episodic and detectable only for a few percent of their lifetimes. The most powerful wind feedback, establishing the M⊙ relation, is probably not directly observable at all. The M⊙ relation signals a global change in the nature of AGN feedback. At black hole masses below M⊙ feedback is confined to the immediate vicinity of the hole. At the M⊙ mass, it becomes much more energetic and widespread and can drive away much of the bulge gas as a fast molecular outflow.