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The close environments of accreting massive black holes are shaped by radiative feedback

Authors :
Andrew C. Fabian
Ezequiel Treister
Michael Koss
Isabella Lamperti
Franz E. Bauer
Anna K. Weigel
Neil Gehrels
Claudio Ricci
Richard F. Mushotzky
Kyuseok Oh
Yanxia Xie
Stéphane Paltani
Benny Trakhtenbrot
Yoshihiro Ueda
Luis C. Ho
Kevin Schawinski
Fabian, Andrew [0000-0002-9378-4072]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Nature, 549
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

The large majority of the accreting supermassive black holes in the Universe are obscured by large columns of gas and dust. The location and evolution of this obscuring material have been the subject of intense research in the past decades, and are still highly debated. A decrease in the covering factor of the circumnuclear material with increasing accretion rates has been found by studies carried out across the electromagnetic spectrum. The origin of this trend has been suggested to be driven either by the increase in the inner radius of the obscuring material with incident luminosity due to the sublimation of dust; by the gravitational potential of the black hole; by radiative feedback; or by the interplay between outflows and inflows. However, the lack of a large, unbiased and complete sample of accreting black holes, with reliable information on gas column density, luminosity and mass, has left the main physical mechanism regulating obscuration unclear. Using a systematic multi-wavelength survey of hard X-ray-selected black holes, here we show that radiation pressure on dusty gas is indeed the main physical mechanism regulating the distribution of the circumnuclear material. Our results imply that the bulk of the obscuring dust and gas in these objects is located within the sphere of influence of the black hole (i.e., a few to tens of parsecs), and that it can be swept away even at low radiative output rates. The main physical driver of the differences between obscured and unobscured accreting black holes is therefore their mass-normalized accretion rate.<br />Comment: To appear in the 28 September 2017 issue of Nature. This is the authors' version of the work

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
549
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a6e9e70c54aeed3432ec2db6c9ad0f8d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature23906