2,230 research outputs found
Jet Acceleration by Tangled Magnetic Fields
We explore the possibility that extragalactic radio jets might be accelerated
by highly disorganized magnetic fields that are strong enough to dominate the
dynamics until the terminal Lorentz factor is reached. Following the
twin-exhaust model by Blandford & Rees (1974), the collimation under this
scenario is provided by the stratified thermal pressure from an external
medium. The acceleration efficiency then depends on the pressure gradient of
that medium. In order for this mechanism to work there must be continuous
tangling of the magnetic field, changing the magnetic equation of state away
from pure flux freezing (otherwise conversion of Poynting flux to kinetic
energy flux is suppressed). This is a complementary approach to models in which
the plasma is accelerated by large scale ordered fields. We include a simple
prescription for magnetic dissipation, which leads to tradeoffs among
conversion of magnetic energy into bulk kinetic energy, random particle energy,
and radiation. We present analytic dynamical solutions of such jets, assess the
effects of radiation drag, and comment on observational issues, such as the
predicted polarization and synchrotron brightness. Finally, we try to make the
connection to observed radio galaxies and gamma-ray bursts.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
What Determines the Depth of BALs? Keck HIRES Observations of BALQSO 1603+300
We find that the depth and shape of the broad absorption lines (BALs) in
BALQSO 1603+3002 are determined largely by the fraction of the emitting source
which is covered by the BAL flow. In addition, the observed depth of the BALs
is poorly correlated with their real optical depth. The implication of this
result is that abundance studies based on direct extraction of column densities
from the depth of the absorption troughs are unreliable. Our conclusion is
based on analysis of unblended absorption features of two lines from the same
ion (in this case the Si IV doublet), which allows unambiguous separation of
covering factor and optical depth effects. The complex morphology of the
covering factor as a function of velocity suggests that the BALs are produced
by several physically separated outflows. The covering factor is ion dependent
in both depth and velocity width. We also find evidence that in BALQSO
1603+3002 the flow does not cover the broad emission line region.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Dynamics of Warm-Absorbing Gas in Seyfert Galaxies: NGC 5548
A hydromagnetic (MHD) wind from a clumpy molecular accretion disk is invoked
to explain observations of warm absorbing (WA) gas in UVX from Sy galaxies.
This paper focuses on two issues: (1) compatibility of kinematics and dynamics
of MHD wind with the observed properties of WAs; and (2) relationship between
the UVX absorptions. We provide an in-depth comparison between the MHD model
and the Sy 1 galaxy NGC 5548, which at high spectral resolution exhibits a
number of discrete UV absorption components. We find that: (1) the total column
densities of Ovii, Oviii and H, are reproduced by constraining the UV ion
column densities of Civ and Nv in each component to lie within a factor of 2 of
their observed values and optimizing over the possible sets of component
ionization states and Civ column densities; (2) the WA exists in the outer part
of the wind and is not a continuation of the flow in the BLR; and (3) the WA
extends in radial and polar directions and is ionization-stratified. X-ray
absorption is found to be heavily biased towards smaller r, and UV absorption
originates at larger distances from the central continuum source. We show that
the discrete absorption components along the line-of-sight are intrinsically
clumpy. Density differences between kinematic components result in a range of
ionization and recombination timescales. We further test the applicability of
the MHD wind to WAs in general, by constructing a quasi-continuous flow model,
and extending it to arbitrary aspect angles. We estimate the fraction of Sy 1s
having detectable WAs with larger Ovii column density than Oviii, and the range
of total H column densities. We also find that the ratio of Ovii to Oviii
optical depths can serve as a new diagnostic of AGN aspect angle.Comment: Latex, 8 postscript figures. Astrophysical Journal, 536, June 10, in
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