from III - The Broad Line Region: Variability and Structure
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
Abstract
This is a short summary of several detailed calculations of strong radiative cooling behind supernova shock waves evolving in a high density medium. These lead to definite predictions about the lag, the observed delay between sudden changes in the continuum ionizing radiation followed, after some time, by changes in the intensity of the emmision lines from the broad line region of AGNs. A full description of these results is due to appear soon in a journal.
Introduction
In the starburst model of AGNs, sometimes viewed as exotic and/or unconventional, the applied physics are in fact most conventional, as it uses the little, or the lot, that we know about real events: the physics of stars and stellar evolution and their interaction with the surrounding gas, and with these predictions are made. In this model, the observed broad emission lines and their variability, are generated by “compact”, strongly radiative supernova remnants which are expected to occur in the central regions of early type galaxies undergoing a violent nuclear burst of star formation. The activity of all stars and the frequency of supernova explosions soon establishes a high pressure region around the cluster. This high pressure, as it acts upon the slow winds from the massive stars (M ≥ 8M⊙), leads to the development of a high density circumstellar medium (n0 ≥ 107 cm−3) around each of the potential supernova stars.
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