AbstractsAstronomy & Space Science

Outflow and Accretion Physics in Active GalacticNuclei

by Sean Michael McGraw




Institution: Ohio University
Department:
Year: 2016
Keywords: Astrophysics; Astronomy; active galaxies; quasar outflows; broad absorption lines; supermassive black holes; accretion disks; AGN; BALs; LLAGN; mini-BALs; FeLoBALs; NGC 4203
Posted: 02/05/2017
Record ID: 2073774
Full text PDF: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1469701247


Abstract

This dissertation focuses on placing observational constraints on outflows and accretion disks in active galactic nuclei (AGN) for the purpose of better understanding the physics of super-massive black holes (SMBHs) and their evolution with the host galaxy over cosmic time. Quasar outflows and their importance in SMBH–host galaxy co-evolution can be further understood by analyzing broad absorption lines (BALs) in rest-frame UV spectra that trace a range of wind conditions. We quantify the properties of the flows by conducting BAL variability studies using multiple-epoch spectra acquired primarily from MDM Observatory and from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Iron low-ionization BALs (FeLoBALs) are a rare type of outflow that may represent a transient phase in galaxy evolution, and we analyze the variations in 12 FeLoBAL quasars with redshifts between 0.7 < z < 1.9 and rest frame timescales between 10 d to 7.6 yr. We investigate BAL variability in 71 quasar outflows that exhibit P V absorption, a tracer of high column density gas (i.e. NH > 1022 cm-2), in order to quantify the energies and momenta of the flows. We also characterize the variability patterns of 26 quasars with mini-BALs, an interesting class of absorbers that may represent a distinct phase in the evolution of outflows. Low-luminosity AGN (LLAGN) are important objects to study since their prominence in the local Universe suggest a possible evolution from the quasar era, and their low radiative outputs likely indicate a distinct mode of accretion onto the SMBH. We probe the accretion conditions in the LLAGN NGC 4203 by estimating the SMBH mass, which is obtained by modeling the 2-dimensional velocity field of the nebular gas using spectra from the Hubble Space Telescope.We detect significant BAL and mini-BAL variability in a subset of quasars from each of our samples, with measured rest-frame variability time-scales from days to years and over multiple years on average. Variable wavelength intervals are associated with high-ionization species such as C IV and N V, low-ionization lines including Mg II and Al III, and ground and excited states from Fe II multiplets. The detected BAL and mini-BAL variations in a subset of sources provide evidence supporting scenarios involving either transverse motions of gas or ionization changes within the absorbers. We conclude that some outflows in our samples likely exist on the order of 0.01–1 pc from the SMBH, and the possibility remains that we are tracing outflowing gas on larger scales within limits ranging from <10 pc to <1 kpc from the central source. We estimate outflow kinetic luminosities between 106 and 1 times the bolometric luminosity of the quasar, indicating that the BAL outflows we probe likely possess a range of energies and only some absorber energies are likely sufficient for AGN feedback processes. We estimate the SMBH mass in the LLAGN in NGC 4203 to be 1.1x107 solar masses within a factor of 2. This mass estimate in conjunction with… Advisors/Committee Members: Shields, Joseph (Advisor).