XRISM/Resolve data on Mrk 509 show a tentative 3.6-sigma infalling absorber at 11000 km/s located within thousands of gravitational radii, interpreted as raining clumps from a failed wind.
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4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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Larger supermassive black holes drive greater atmospheric heating, mass loss, and near-total ozone depletion on exoplanets, with effects strongest in energy-driven winds and closer to the galactic center.
NIRCam-selected AGN hosts split into a 'bridge' group with moderate-to-low SFRs and a 'branch' group above the SFMS with SFR rising with AGN fraction; both populations show recent transitions between star formation and quiescence.
citing papers explorer
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Is XRISM/Resolve probing a "raining" absorber in Mrk 509?
XRISM/Resolve data on Mrk 509 show a tentative 3.6-sigma infalling absorber at 11000 km/s located within thousands of gravitational radii, interpreted as raining clumps from a failed wind.
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The Impact of Supermassive Black Holes on Exoplanet Habitability. I. Spanning the Natural Mass Range
Larger supermassive black holes drive greater atmospheric heating, mass loss, and near-total ozone depletion on exoplanets, with effects strongest in energy-driven winds and closer to the galactic center.
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PEARLS: Two Distinct Populations of AGN Hosts Moving Between Star Formation and Quiescence
NIRCam-selected AGN hosts split into a 'bridge' group with moderate-to-low SFRs and a 'branch' group above the SFMS with SFR rising with AGN fraction; both populations show recent transitions between star formation and quiescence.
- Observational Properties of Nonthermal Emission from Relativistic Jets Escaping Active Galactic Nucleus Disks