Fermi bubbles: the collimated outburst needed to explain forward-shock edges

Author:

Mondal Santanu1ORCID,Keshet Uri1ORCID,Sarkar Kartick C2ORCID,Gurwich Ilya3

Affiliation:

1. Physics Department, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev , POB 653, Be’er-Sheva 84105, Israel

2. Center for Astrophysics and Planetary Science, Racah Institute of Physics, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem , Zip code 91904, Israel

3. Department of Physics , NRCN, POB 9001, Beer-Sheva 84190, Israel

Abstract

ABSTRACT The bipolar, non-thermal, high-latitude lobes known as the Fermi bubbles (FBs) are thought to originate from a massive energy release near the Galactic Centre (GC). We constrain the FB engine and the circumgalactic medium (CGM) by analytically and numerically modelling the FB edges as strong forward shocks, as inferred from recent observations. A non-directed energy release produces shocks too spherical to account for observations even for a maximally massive Galactic disc, critical CGM rotation, or injection effectively offset from the GC. In contrast, collimated injection nearly perpendicular to the disc can account for observations in both ballistic (free expansion) and slowdown regimes, as we show using a simple stratified evolution model verified by hydrodynamic simulations. FBs still in their ballistic regime require injection (at z ≃ 100 pc heights in our model) with a half-opening angle θ ≃ 4°, a normalized velocity β−2 ≡ v/(0.01c) ≳ 0.4, and an energy $E\gtrsim 2\beta _{-2}^2\times 10^{55}$ erg, launched $\mathbb {T}\simeq 3.3\beta _{-2}^{-1}$ Myr ago, showing a distinctive low-pressure region behind the bubble head. Slowing-down (mass accumulated) FBs require a faster injection, a thinner jet, a smaller E/(β−2θ)2, and a comparable $\mathbb {T}$, and follow a ballistic stage that must reach a height zs ≳ 5 kpc.

Funder

IAEC

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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