Observing the launch of an Eddington wind in the luminous Seyfert galaxy PG1211+143 (2310.18105v2)
Abstract: The luminous narrow line Seyfert galaxy PG1211+143 was the first non-BAL AGN to reveal a powerful ionized wind, based on early observations with ESA's XMM-Newton X-ray Observatory. Subsequent observations, mainly with XMM-Newton and the Japanese Suzaku Observatory, found such winds to be a common feature of luminous AGN. Typical outflow velocities of v ~ 0.1c and flow momenta mv ~ L_Edd /c are consistent with winds being launched by continuum driving from a disc when the local mass accretion rate is super-Eddington. Here we report the launch of a new, ultra-fast outflow component in PG1211+143, near the end of a 5-week XMM-Newton observing campaign, and discuss its origin in an ultra-fast {\it inflow} detected some 3 weeks earlier. We note that the inflow lasted for at least 3 days and delivered at least 10 Earth mass of fresh material into the innermost region of the source. While this mass by itself is insufficient to cause a complete inner disc restructuring - a prediction supported by lack of change in simultaneous UV fluxes - we suggest that a ring of matter at R ~ 20 R_g, located via its gravitational redshift (Pounds and Page 2024), was subsequently accreted, leading to the launch of a new outflow at a velocity of v ~ 0.27c.
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