396 research outputs found
Dusty, Radiation Pressure Dominated Photoionization. II. Multi-Wavelength Emission Line Diagnostics for Narrow Line Regions
Seyfert narrow line region (NLR) emission line ratios are remarkably uniform,
displaying only ~0.5 dex variation between galaxies, and even less within an
individual object. Previous photoionization and shock models of this region
were unable to explain this observation without the introduction of arbitrary
assumptions or additional parameters. Dusty, radiation pressure dominated
photoionization models provide a simple physical mechanism which can reproduce
this spectral uniformity between different objects. In the first paper of this
series we described this model and its implementation in detail, as well as
presenting grids of model emission lines and examining the model structures.
Here we explore these models further, demonstrating their ability to reproduce
the observed Seyfert line ratios on standard line diagnostic diagrams in both
the optical and UV. We also investigate the effects that the variation of
metallicity, density and ionizing spectrum have upon both the new paradigm and
the standard photoionization models used hitherto. Along with the standard
diagnostic diagrams we provide several new diagnostic diagrams in the UV,
Optical and IR. These new diagrams can provide further tests of the dusty,
radiation pressure photoionization paradigm as well as being used as
diagnostics of the metallicity, density and ionizing spectrum of the emission
line clouds.Comment: Accepted by ApJS, full pdf including figures can be obtained at
http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~bgroves/Papers/ApJS2.pd
Photoionization models for extreme Ly 1216 and HeII 1640 ratios in quasar halos, and PopIII vs AGN diagnostics
We explore mechanisms to produce extremely high Ly-alpha/HeII flux ratios, or
to enhance the observed number of Ly-alpha photons per incident ionizing
photon, in extended AGN-photoionized nebulae at high-redshift. Using
photoionization models, we explore the impact of ionization parameter, gas
metallicity, ionizing spectrum, electron energy distribution, and cloud viewing
angle on the relative fluxes of Ly-alpha, HeII and other lines, and on the
observed number of Ly-alpha photons per incident ionizing photon. We find that
low ionization parameter, a relatively soft or filtered ionizing spectrum, low
gas metallicity, kappa-distributed electron energies, or reflection of Ly-alpha
photons by HI can all result in significantly enhanced Ly-alpha relative to
other lines (>10%), with log Ly-alpha/HeII reaching values up to 4.6. In the
cases of low gas metallicity, reflection by HI, or a hard or filtered ionizing
spectrum, the observed number of Ly-alpha photons per incident ionizing photon
is itself significantly enhanced above the nominal Case B value of 0.66 due to
collisional excitation, reaching values up to 5.3 in our 'extreme case' model.
At low gas metallicity (e.g. 0.1 x Solar), the production of Ly-alpha is
predominantly via collisional excitation rather than recombination. In
addition, we find that collisional excitation of Ly-alpha becomes more
efficient if the ionizing continuum is pre-filtered through an optically thin
screen of gas closer to the AGN. We also show that Ly-alpha / HeII ratios of
the z~3.5 quasars studied by Borisova et al. (2016) are consistent with
AGN-photoionization of gas with moderate to low metallicity and/or low
ionization parameter, without requiring exotic ionization/excitation mechanisms
such as strong line-transfer effects. We also present UV-optical diagnostic
diagrams to distinguish between photoionization by Pop III stars and AGN
photoionization.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 14 pages, 9 figures. Abstract
slightly shortened to meet arxiv character limi
The AGN-starburst connection, Galactic superwinds, and M_BH - sigma
Recent observations of young galaxies at redshifts z ~ 3 have revealed
simultaneous AGN and starburst activity, as well as galaxy-wide superwinds. I
show that there is probably a close connection between these phenomena by
extending an earlier treatment of the M_BH - sigma relation (King, 2003). As
the black hole grows, an outflow drives a shell into the surrounding gas. This
stalls after a dynamical time at a size determined by the hole's current mass
and thereafter grows on the Salpeter timescale. The gas trapped inside this
bubble cools and forms stars and is recycled as accretion and outflow. The
consequent high metallicity agrees with that commonly observed in AGN
accretion. Once the hole reaches a critical mass this region attains a size
such that the gas can no longer cool efficiently. The resulting energy-driven
flow expels the remaining gas as a superwind, fixing both the M_BH - sigma
relation and the total stellar bulge mass at values in good agreement with
observation. Black hole growth thus produces starbursts and ultimately a
superwind.Comment: ApJ, in press, 4 page
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