Probing the circumgalactic medium of active galactic nuclei with background quasars
Abstract
We performed a detailed study of the extended cool gas, traced by MgII absorption [Wr(2796)≥0.3~], surrounding 14 narrow-line active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at 0.12<z<0.22 using background quasar sight-lines. The background quasars probe the AGNs at projected distances of 60≤ D≤265~kpc. We find that, between 100≤ D≤200~kpc, AGNs appear to have lower MgII gas covering fractions (0.09+0.18-0.08) than quasars (0.47+0.16-0.15) and possibly lower than in active field galaxies (0.25+0.11-0.09). We do not find a statistically significant azimuthal angle dependence for the MgII covering fraction around AGNs, though the data hint at one. We also study the `down-the-barrel' outflow properties of the AGNs themselves and detect intrinsic NaID absorption in 8/8 systems and intrinsic MgII absorption in 2/2 systems, demonstrating that the AGNs have significant reservoirs of cool gas. We find that 6/8 NaID and 2/2 MgII intrinsic systems contain blueshifted absorption with v>50 km/s, indicating outflowing gas. The 2/2 intrinsic MgII systems have outflow velocities a factor of 4 higher than the NaID outflow velocities. Our results are consistent with AGN-driven outflows destroying the cool gas within their halos, which dramatically decreases their cool gas covering fraction, while star-burst driven winds are expelling cool gas into their circumgalactic media (CGM). This picture appears contrary to quasar--quasar pair studies which show that the quasar CGM contains significant amounts of cool gas whereas intrinsic gas found `down-the-barrel' of quasars reveals no cool gas. We discuss how these results are complementary and provide support for the AGN unified model.
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