Abstract
Quasars, which are exceptionally bright objects at the centres (or nuclei) of galaxies, are thought to be produced through the accretion of gas into disks surrounding supermassive black holes1,2,3. There is observational evidence at galactic and circumnuclear scales4 that gas flows inwards towards accretion disks around black holes, and such an inflow has been measured at the scale of the dusty torus that surrounds the central accretion disk5. At even smaller scales, inflows close to an accretion disk have been suggested to explain the results of recent modelling of the response of gaseous broad emission lines to continuum variations6,7. However, unambiguous observations of inflows that actually reach accretion disks have been elusive. Here we report the detection of redshifted broad absorption lines of hydrogen and helium atoms in a sample of quasars. The lines show broad ranges of Doppler velocities that extend continuously from zero to redshifts as high as about 5,000 kilometres per second. We interpret this as the inward motion of gases at velocities comparable to freefall speeds close to the black hole, constraining the fastest infalling gas to within 10,000 gravitational radii of the black hole (the gravitational radius being the gravitational constant multiplied by the object mass, divided by the speed of light squared). Extensive photoionization modelling yields a characteristic radial distance of the inflow of approximately 1,000 gravitational radii, possibly overlapping with the outer accretion disk.
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Data availability
All observational data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author on request.
Code availability
The custom computer code used to analyse and model the observational data here is available from the corresponding author on request, for the purpose of repeating the published results only.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the use of the Hale 200-inch Telescope at Palomar Observatory through the Telescope Access Program (TAP), which made these observations possible. Funding for the third Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-III; http://www.sdss3.org) has been provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the participating institutions, the US National Science Foundation and the US Department of Energy Office of Science. H.Z., L.S. and X.P. acknowledge support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC11473025) and the SOC programme (CHINARE2017-02-03). X.C. and G. Li are grateful for support from the Key Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDPB09-02).
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Contributions
H.Z. conceived the project. X.P. led the data acquisition and reduction, with J.G., T.J., P.J. and Z.Z. X.S. analysed the data and performed the photoionization simulations, with W.L., H.L. and G. Li helping with data analysis. W.Y., X.S., L.H., X.C. and G. Liu contributed to writing the manuscript. B.L., J.S., X.S., L.S., Q.T., H.W., T.W., S.W., C.Y. and S.Z. provided critical feedback and helped to shape the manuscript.
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Extended data figures and tables
Extended Data Fig. 1 Sensitive range of broad absorption lines in H i* Balmer series and metastable He i*multiplets in gas near a black hole.
Assuming a black hole of mass M• = 109Mʘ, accreting at an Eddington ratio of 0.1, the column densities of H0 at the n = 2 level \({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{H}}}_{n=2}^{0}\right)\) and He0 at the metastable level 23S (Ncol(He023S)) can be evaluated through photoionization simulations for gas of various densities (total hydrogen density; nH), total column density (NH) and distance (in units of Rg). Assuming a Gaussian velocity dispersion (FWHM = 3,000 km s−1), a specified line is considered to be sensitive in measuring the ionic column density as long as the optical depth is in the range 0.05–3 at the line centre. The coloured areas show the sensitive ranges for only three lines in each series for clarity: a–f, Hα, Hδ and Hκ at λrest = 6,564, 4,102 and 3,750 Å; and g–l, \({{\rm{H}}{\rm{e}}\,{\rm{I}}}_{6,4,3}^{\ast }\)≡ He i* λλ2,829, 3,889, 10,830.
Extended Data Fig. 2 Optical spectra for our sample of quasars with redshifted H i* and He i*broad absorption lines.
We plot the SDSS-observed spectra of seven quasars with pure redshifted broad absorption lines (or mini-broad ones) in the H i* Balmer and metastable He i* series in their rest frames. The systemic redshifts are determined from narrow emission lines including [O ii] (grey dotted-dashed vertical lines). As in Fig. 1, the blue dash-dotted lines mark the rest wavelengths of the H i* and He i* transitions. The wavelength ranges of the absorption lines are shaded in orange.
Extended Data Fig. 3 Close-ups of selective hydrogen lines from the absorption lines.
We plot selective H i* Balmer absorption lines (orange) from the SDSS spectra of the seven quasars in Extended Data Fig. 2 in their common velocity space. The data are normalized by the continuum after subtracting the best-fit emission-line models (as for J1035 + 1422 in Fig. 2). The error bars denote 1σ flux uncertainties. a–d, Four bona fide broad-absorption-line quasars with absorption troughs spanning a wide range of velocities from roughly 0 to 4,000 km s−1 (much wider than the criterion for definition of a broad absorption line, that is, 2,000 km s−1). e–g, The absorption troughs of the remaining three quasars have widths of roughly 1,000−2,000 km s−1 and are formally classified as ‘mini-broad absorption lines’.
Extended Data Fig. 4 Velocity structure of the redshifted Hα broad absorption line of J1035 + 1422.
The optical depth (red) and local covering factor (blue) of the line, derived from the continuum-normalized spectrum, are shown as a function of velocity shift with respect to the quasar’s rest frame. The error bars represent 1σ uncertainties.
Extended Data Fig. 5 Probability density distribution in the parameter space of the total hydrogen density (nH) and distance from the central engine (dinflow) for different inflow models.
a, The simplest primordial models are applied, and the redshifted H i* and He i* broad absorption lines are used to evaluate the probability density. However, the highly probable models predict much higher column densities of C3+ ions (\({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{ground}}}^{3+}\right)\)) than that estimated from the redshifted C iv broad-absorption-line trough. b, To resolve this problem, only the region beyond the C3+ region (the ‘post-C3+ region’) in the primordial models is used to describe the inflow gas, and probability density is recalculated by including C iv. The results of these refined model calculations are shown here. The probability density shows two peaks around nH ≈ 107 cm−3 and dinflow ≈ 2,000Rg, and nH ≈ 109.5 cm−3 and dinflow ≈ 100Rg (see also Fig. 3).
Extended Data Fig. 6 Comparison between observation and model calculations for selected metal absorption lines.
a, Recovered spectra of C iv, corrected for redshifted absorption, assuming C3+ ion column densities of \({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{ground}}}^{3+}\right)\) = 1015, 1016 and 1017 cm−2 in the quasar’s rest frame. The error bars on the observed flux denote 1σ uncertainty. Compared with the best-fit SDSS composite spectrum (blue dashed line), the recovered flux is much too weak for the absorption when \({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{ground}}}^{3+}\right)\) = 1015 cm−2, while it is too high (showing two extra deceptive peaks at around 1,550 and 1,570 Å) for the absorption when \({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{ground}}}^{3+}\right)\) = 1017 cm−2. The absorption model with \({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{ground}}}^{3+}\right)\) ≈ 1016 cm−2 predicts unabsorbed flux that is reasonably consistent with the composite spectrum, and is thus adopted. b, Absorption-corrected UV Fe ii spectra between 2,000 and 2,750 Å for the post-C3+ inflow models with nH = 107 cm−3 (red), 107.5 cm−3 (yellow), 109 cm−3 (green), and 109.5 cm−3 (violet) in the high ‘probability’ zone of Extended Data Fig. 5b. The error bars on observed flux are 1σ uncertainties. Compared with the best-fit composite (blue dashed line), the models with higher densities can be clearly ruled out.
Extended Data Fig. 7 Photoionization models for inflow/outflow and the transmitted spectral energy distributions.
a, The ionization structure of a primordial model with nH = 107 cm−3 and U = 100.5 that is directly illuminated by the central continuum source of the quasar. If integrated from the illuminated surface, the model with \({N}_{{\rm{c}}{\rm{o}}{\rm{l}}}({{\rm{H}}}_{n=2}^{0})\) and \({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{He}}}^{0}{2}^{3}{\rm{S}}\right)\) values that are comparable to the measurements predicts \({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{ground}}}^{3+}\right)\) values of more than 1019 cm−2, far from the estimated \({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{ground}}}^{3+}\right)\) in the redshifted broad absorption line. An alternative solution is that the inflow in fact corresponds to the grey area, which is gas behind the C3+ region (the light green area, where C3+ and other high-ionization ions dominate). In such a picture, the outflow is suggested to play an equivalent role to the C3+ region in this panel in eliminating high-energy ionizing photons. b, Plot of the ionization structure for an outflow with nH = 109.5 cm−3 and U = 100.5. The requirement for transmitted radiation (which should have the same spectral energy distribution as the incident radiation on inflow) could constrain the thickness of outflow model. The outer surface of this model (red dashed line) coincides highly with the extension of the C3+ region. However, Ncol(He023S), measured using the blueshifted He i* λ10,830, defines a thinner outflow gas (blue dashed line) if we assume that the local covering factor, Cf, is wavelength independent. c, The transmitted spectral energy distributions through the spectral-energy-distribution-constrained outflow and the Ncol(He023S)-defined outflow are plotted. The former (red) naturally coincides with the incident spectral energy distribution for the inflow model, while the latter (blue) shows considerable excess in soft X-ray, which would result in a much larger \({N}_{{\rm{col}}}\left({{\rm{C}}}_{{\rm{ground}}}^{3+}\right)\) in the inflow than the measurement. d, Transmitted spectral energy distributions through a Ncol(He023S)-defined outflow model with nH = 109.5 cm−3, U = 100.5 and different metallicities. The spectral-energy distribution depends sensitively on the metallicity. As the metallicity increases from 1Zʘ to 10Zʘ, the transmitted spectral energy distribution seems to match the incident spectral energy distribution required by the inflow model, suggesting that a metal-rich outflow model could explain the measurement in both the redshifted and the blueshifted broad-absorption-line systems.
Extended Data Fig. 8 Comparison of the Hα emission line in observations and simple model calculations.
a, Observed (black line) and absorption-corrected (orange dotted line) broad Hα emission line spectra of J1035 + 1422, normalized to the continuum. Overplotted for comparison are the Hα emission lines predicted by photoionization models from the inflow (red dashed line), the outflow (blue dashed line), and both (green dotted line) (assuming a covering factor of 0.5 (Ωi = Ω0= 0.5 in Supplementary Table 1) and a radial velocity 5,000 km s−1 for both inflow and outflow). Clearly, the observed Hα is much stronger than the model prediction. This may be due to the oversimplicity of the models, in which a much broader velocity range is missing. Alternatively, and more likely, the excess Hα flux might be contributed by the accretion disk. b, The residual line profile (cyan dotted line; the zigzag shape is caused by the oversimplified model assumption of a single velocity instead of the actual large velocity gradient), which largely resembles the Hα line observed in the well studied disk-emitting quasar 3C332 (ref. 43; grey solid line). Note that 3C332 shows a substantial excess component with respect to the best-fit disk line model (violet dashed line), which is redshifted with a velocity range of roughly 0−5,000 km s−1. This is reminiscent of the redshifted Hα broad absorption line found in J1035 + 1422 here, suggesting the interesting possibility that this excess Hα emission in 3C332 might originate from inflows.
Supplementary information
Supplementary Table 1
Predicted emission line equivalent widths from the outflow and inflow of J1035+1422 in comparison with the averaged broad-emission-line equivalent widths of quasars.
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Zhou, H., Shi, X., Yuan, W. et al. Fast inflows as the adjacent fuel of supermassive black hole accretion disks in quasars. Nature 573, 83–86 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1510-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1510-y
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