4.7 Article

Q WIND3: UV line-driven accretion disc wind models for AGN feedback

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 518, Issue 2, Pages 2693-2711

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac3171

Keywords

accretion, accretion discs; radiative transfer; galaxies: active; quasars: general

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This article introduces a non-hydrodynamical approach to calculate the UV-bright accretion disc in AGNs and its resulting wind. The updated QWIND model improves the calculation of wind absorption and corrects for relativistic effects on wind velocity. The model predicts that winds can reach velocities up to (0.1-0.5)c and carry mass loss rates up to 80% of the accreted mass.
The ultraviolet (UV) bright accretion disc in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) should give rise to line driving, producing a powerful wind that may play an important role in AGN feedback as well as in producing structures like the broad-line region. However, coupled radiation-hydrodynamic codes are complex and expensive, so we calculate the winds instead using a non-hydrodynamical approach (the QWIND framework). The original QWIND model assumed the initial conditions in the wind, and had only simple radiation transport. Here, we present an improved version that derives the wind initial conditions and has significantly improved ray tracing to calculate the wind absorption self-consistently, given the extended nature of the UV emission. We also correct the radiation flux for relativistic effects and assess the impact of this on the wind velocity. These changes mean the model is more physical, so its predictions are more robust. We find that, even when accounting for relativistic effects, winds can regularly achieve velocities similar or equal to(0.1-0.5)c, and carry mass-loss rates that can be up to 80 per cent of the accreted mass for black hole masses of 10(7-9) M-circle dot, and mass accretion rates of 50 per cent of the Eddington rate. Overall, the ratio of kinetic power carried by the wind to bolometric luminosity increases with mass accretion rate at a given black hole mass, unlike the constant fraction generally assumed in current cosmological simulations that include AGN feedback. The updated code, QWIND3, is publicly available in GitHub.

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