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Deep silicate absorption features in compton-thick active galactic nuclei predominantly arise due to dust in the host galaxy

Authors :
C. Jones
Ryan C. Hickox
James Mullaney
David M. Alexander
William R. Forman
Franz E. Bauer
Andy D. Goulding
Markos Trichas
Source :
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, Artículos CONICYT, CONICYT Chile, instacron:CONICYT, Astrophysical journal, 2012, Vol.755(1), pp.5 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
IOP PUBLISHING LTD, 2012.

Abstract

We explore the origin of mid-infrared (mid-IR) dust extinction in all 20 nearby (z < 0.05) bona fide Compton-thick (N H > 1.5 × 1024 cm-2) active galactic nuclei (AGNs) with hard energy (E > 10 keV) X-ray spectral measurements. We accurately measure the silicate absorption features at λ ~ 9.7 μm in archival low-resolution (R ~ 57-127) Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph spectroscopy, and show that only a minority (≈45%) of nearby Compton-thick AGNs have strong Si-absorption features (S 9.7 = ln (f int/f obs) >~ 0.5) which would indicate significant dust attenuation. The majority (≈60%) are star formation dominated (AGN:SB < 0.5) at mid-IR wavelengths and lack the spectral signatures of AGN activity at optical wavelengths, most likely because the AGN emission lines are optically extinguished. Those Compton-thick AGNs hosted in low-inclination-angle galaxies exhibit a narrow range in Si-absorption (S 9.7 ~ 0-0.3), which is consistent with that predicted by clumpy-torus models. However, on the basis of the IR spectra and additional lines of evidence, we conclude that the dominant contribution to the observed mid-IR dust extinction is dust located in the host galaxy (i.e., due to disturbed morphologies, dust lanes, galaxy inclination angles) and not necessarily a compact obscuring torus surrounding the central engine.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, Artículos CONICYT, CONICYT Chile, instacron:CONICYT, Astrophysical journal, 2012, Vol.755(1), pp.5 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....741196358ab5aad350fef84ae4dff278