Back to Search Start Over

Connecting X-ray nuclear winds with galaxy-scale ionised outflows in two $z\sim1.5$ lensed quasars

Authors :
Tozzi, G.
Cresci, G.
Marasco, A.
Nardini, E.
Marconi, A.
Mannucci, F.
Chartas, G.
Rizzo, F.
Amiri, A.
Brusa, M.
Comastri, A.
Dadina, M.
Lanzuisi, G.
Mainieri, V.
Mingozzi, M.
Perna, M.
Venturi, G.
Vignali, C.
Source :
A&A 648, A99 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Outflows driven by active galactic nuclei (AGN) are expected to have a significant impact on the host galaxy evolution, but it is still debated how they are accelerated and propagate on galaxy-wide scales. This work addresses these questions by studying the link between X-ray, nuclear ultra-fast outflows (UFOs) and extended ionised outflows, for the first time in two quasars close to the peak of AGN activity ($z\sim2$), where AGN feedback is expected to be more effective. As targets, we selected two multiple-lensed quasars at $z\sim1.5$, HS 0810+2554 and SDSS J1353+1138, known to host UFOs and observed with the near-IR integral field spectrometer SINFONI at the VLT. We performed a kinematical analysis of the [O III]$\lambda$5007 optical emission line, in order to trace the presence of ionised outflows. We detected spatially resolved ionised outflows in both galaxies, extended more than 8 kpc and moving up to $v>2000$ km/s. We derived mass outflow rates of $\sim$12 M$_{sun}$/yr and $\sim$2 M$_{sun}$/yr for HS 0810+2554 and SDSS J1353+1138. Comparing with the co-hosted UFO energetics, the ionised outflow energetics in HS 0810+2554 is broadly consistent with a momentum-driven regime of wind propagation, while in SDSS J1353+1138 it differs by a factor of $\sim$100 from theoretical predictions, requiring either a massive molecular outflow or a high variability of the AGN activity to account for such a discrepancy. By additionally considering our results with those from the small sample of well-studied objects (all local but one), with both UFO and extended (ionised/atomic/molecular) outflow detections, we found that in 10 out of 12 galaxies the large-scale outflow energetics is consistent with the theoretical predictions of either a momentum- or an energy-driven scenario. This suggests that such models explain relatively well the acceleration mechanism of AGN-driven winds on large scales.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 648, A99 (2021)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2102.07789
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202040190