English

Why a Windy Torus?

Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics 2013-03-29 v1

Abstract

Mass ejection in the form of winds or jets appears to be as fundamental to quasar activity as accretion, and can be directly observed in many objects with broadened and blue-shifted UV absorption features. A convincing argument for radiation pressure driving this ionized outflow can be made within the dust sublimation radius. Beyond, radiation pressure is even more important, as high energy photons from the central engine can now push on dust grains. This physics underlies the dusty-wind model for the putative obscuring torus. Specifically, the dusty wind in our model is first launched from the outer accretion disk as a magneto-centrifugal wind and then accelerated and shaped by radiation pressure from the central continuum. Such a wind can plausibly account for both the necessary obscuring medium to explain the ratio of broad-to-narrow-line objects and the mid-infrared emission commonly seen in quasar spectral energy distributions. A convincing demonstration that large-scale, organized magnetic fields are present in radio-quiet active galactic nuclei is now required to bolster the case for this paradigm.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1303.7142,
  title  = {Why a Windy Torus?},
  author = {S. C. Gallagher and M. M. Abado and J. E. Everett and S. Keating and R. P. Deo},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1303.7142},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

8 pages. Proceedings article for the Torus Workshop 2012 held at U. Texas at San Antonio Dec 5-7, 2012. C. Packham. R. Mason, A. Alonson-Herrero (eds.)

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