GeminiFocus December 2012 | Page 10

In recent years, this type of feedback from accreting black holes has become a key element in modeling galaxy evolution. Feedback can, in principle, explain galaxy/black hole correlations and the lack of overly massive blue galaxies in the local universe. As significant as these achievements are, it has been challenging to find direct observational evidence of black hole/galaxy selfregulation and to obtain measurements of feedback energetics. Quasar Winds Quasars are so luminous (L=1045 -1047 erg/s) that they should be able to launch powerful winds just by exerting radiation pressure on the surrounding gas. The gas near the quasar may be accelerated to thousands of kilometers per second (km/s); it then pushes on the gas further out, which in turn pushes on the gas at even larger distances from the quasar –– thus launching a large-scale (galaxy-wide) wind. Over the last few years, we and our collaborators have studied the distribution and kinematics of warm ionized gas around quasars to search for such winds. Figure 1. Since the 1980s, several other groups have independently conducted similar types of observations. One of the most striking conclusions of these previous studies is that quasars with relativistic jets (and those without them) showed very different morphologies of ionized gas on galaxy-wide scales. Quasars without radio jets often showed no detectable extended emission at all. Objects with jets, both at low and high redshifts, routinely showed ionized gas emission on the scale of tens of kiloparsecs (kpc), with velocities of several hundred km/s – often well in excess of the escape velocity from the galaxy – and with high levels of turbulence. Sometimes these outflows align nicely with the direction of the radio jet; sometimes, the extended ionized gas is oriented in a completely different direction. Some outflows, especially those observed in high-redshift radio galaxies, entrain a significant fraction of the entire galaxy’s gas content. Thus, clear evidence exists that powerful radio jets exert a strong feedback effect on their hosts. The jet heads slam into the interstellar medium and drive shocks which engulf and accelerate at least some of the gas in the galaxy. However, only a small fraction (~10 percent) of accreting black holes produce powerful jets at any given time — perhaps only some black holes are capable of launching them, or all black holes have them but for only a small fraction of their active lifetime. In either case, jet-driven feedback alone is probably insufficient to make the kind of impact necessary for establishing black hole/galaxy correlations and for limiting galaxy mass. Therefore, we decided to revisit observations of ionized gas around quasars without jets (so-called “radio-quiet” quasars) to see whether accreting black holes launch winds in their most common phase of activity. In order to study this we made two key changes compared to the previous studies. Brightness distribution of [O iii] emission in radioquiet quasar nebulae on a logarithmic scale, as measured from our GMOS observations (in units of 10−17 erg s−1cm−2 arcsec−2). 10 GeminiFocus December2012