Submitted by PHealthy t3_124xb33 in askscience
adamginsburg t1_je1wwcd wrote
Reply to comment by AuDHDiego in Is NaCl relatively common in the galaxy/universe? by PHealthy
There actually is a decent amount expelled in gigantic jets, but the jets from quasars are relativistic (i.e., travel at a significant fraction of the speed of light) and escape the galaxy. Google "radio galaxies" and look at those images: they show jets shooting to megaparsec size scales (i.e., 10-100x bigger than galaxies), so that material totally escapes the galaxy.
That said, there is probably some material from quasars that gets mixed back into the galaxy - I think not that much, but honestly there's a lot unknown about gas cycling in the vicinity of rapidly accreting black holes. Nevertheless, even if all the accretion disk material got fed back into the galaxy, it would represent a truly tiny fraction of the galaxy's mass, much less than the material made by supernovae (our black hole is 10^6 solar masses, our galaxy is ~10^12 solar masses, of which ~10^11 is baryonic - so the black hole is a tiny fraction of the galaxy, and the accretion disk is a tiny fraction of that. my numbers here are super rough)
AuDHDiego t1_je22f3r wrote
Oh just saw that you're the author of the referenced paper! Gosh oops that I missed that!
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Congratulations on finding the salty disk!
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