We present high resolution spectroscopic VLT observations of the outflow seen
in QSO 2359-1241. These data contain absorption troughs from five resonance Fe
II lines with a resolution of ~7 km/s and signal-to-noise ratio per resolution
element of order 100. We use this unprecedented high quality data set to
investigate the physical distribution of the material in front of the source,
and by that determine the column densities of the absorbed troughs. We find
that the apparent optical depth model gives a very poor fit to the data and
greatly underestimates the column density measurements. Power-law distributions
and partial covering models give much better fits with some advantage to
power-law models, while both models yield similar column density estimates. The
better fit of the power-law model solves a long standing problem plaguing the
partial covering model when applied to large distance scale outflow: How to
obtain a velocity dependent covering factor for an outflow situated at
distances thousands of time greater than the size of the AGN emission source.
This problem does not affect power-law models. Therefore, based on the better
fit and plausibility of the physical model, we conclude that in QSO 2359-1241,
the outflow covers the full extent of the emission source but in a
non-homogeneous way.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures, to appear on ApJ Jul 10. The full (online)
version of figure 2 can be obtained here:
http://www.phys.vt.edu/~arav/f2_online_version.p