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Spectropolarimetry Surveys of Obscured Active Galactic Nuclei Edward Moran Wesleyan University

Spectropolarimetry Surveys of Obscured Active Galactic Nuclei Edward Moran Wesleyan University Aaron Barth (UC Irvine), Laura Kay (Barnard), Alex Filippenko (UC Berkeley), Mike Eracleous (Penn State). M. Urry & P. Padovani. Moran et al. (2000). Where is the mirror?.

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Spectropolarimetry Surveys of Obscured Active Galactic Nuclei Edward Moran Wesleyan University

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  1. Spectropolarimetry Surveys of Obscured Active Galactic Nuclei Edward Moran Wesleyan University Aaron Barth (UC Irvine), Laura Kay (Barnard), Alex Filippenko (UC Berkeley), Mike Eracleous (Penn State)

  2. M. Urry & P. Padovani Moran et al. (2000)

  3. Where is the mirror? • can extend from the opening of the torus to > 100 pc from the nucleus (i.e., in the NLR; Kishimoto 1999; Kishimoto et al. 2002a, 2002b) Where is the obscuration? • narrow lines are unpolarized • obscuration must be beyond the BLR, but interior to most of the NLR (i.e., ~ 1 – few pc) Moran et al. (2000)

  4. Starlight dilution • Seyfert 2 spectra dominated by unpolarized bulge starlight • Fg = 50–90% is typical; dilutes polarization signal • but after starlight correction, P(Ha) still > P(continuum) • “FC2” also dilutes polarization; caused by hot stars (e.g., Gonzalez Delgado et al. 1998) • High intrinsic polarizations obtained after correction for FC2 (Tran 1995) N3081 N224 N3081

  5. Spectropolarimetry Surveys Young et al. (1996) • sample: 24 “warm” IRAS galaxies & selected Seyfert 2s • instrument: AAT 3.9-m • results: some new detections, but no HBLR in majority Heisler, Lumsden, & Bailey (1997) • sample: 16 IRAS-selected Seyfert 2s, S60 > 5 Jy • instrument: AAT 3.9-m • results: 1 new detection; 44% (7 objects) are HBLRs

  6. Spectropolarimetry Surveys Lumsden et al. (2001) • sample: 24 IRAS-selected Seyfert 2s, S60 > 3 Jy, LFIR > 1010L¡, S60/S25 < 8.85 • instrument: AAT 3.9-m, WHT 4.2-m • results: 1 new detection, 33% (8 objects) are HBLRs · Tran (2001, 2003) • sample: 49 objects from the CfA and 12 mm samples • instrument: Lick 3-m & Palomar 5-m • results: 5 new detections; 45% (22 objects) are HBLRs

  7. Us (Moran et al. 2000, 2001; Kay et al. 2006) • sample: 38 objects from Ulvestad & Wilson (1989; UW89) * 31 bona fide Seyfert 2s * 7 narrow-line X-ray galaxies (4 Sy 1.9s & 3 Sy 2s) * distance-limited (cz < 4600 km s–1) • instrument: Keck 10-m • results: 9 new detections, 45% (17 objects) are HBLRs Barth, Filippenko, & Moran (1999) • sample: 14 LLAGNs objects from the Ho et al. (1997) survey • instrument: Keck 10-m • results: 3 new HBLRs in LINERs * two LINER 1.9s (NGC 315, NGC 1052) * one LINER 2 (NGC 4261)

  8. Differences between HBLR and Non-HBLR Seyfert 2s? Moran et al. (1992)

  9. Sample issues: • Flux-limited surveys * clearly defined * luminosity bias • Volume-limited surveys * no bias * completeness is a concern • UW89 sample is relatively unbiased • Impotant because luminosity is one of the main issues here

  10. UW89 result: HBLRs have somwhat higher Pcore Radio luminosity • Lumsden et al. (2001): not much difference in total radio power Ptot; HBLRs slightly higher core luminosity Pcore • Tran (2003): HBLRs slightly stronger in Ptot • Gu & Huang (2002): HBLRs significantly stronger in Ptot

  11. Far-infrared colors • All previous studies find that HBLRs are significantly “warmer” than non-HBLRs (Heisler, Tran, Lumsden, Gu) • UW89 result: differences not nearly as extreme UW89 sample CfA/12mm sample (Tran 2003)

  12. composite X-ray spectra Moran et al. (2001) Other indicators • L([O III]) * prior studies: HBLRs tend to be more luminous * significant overlap between HBLRs and non-HBLRs • Hard X-ray * NH distributions of HBLRs and non-HBLRs are similar (Alexander 2001; Tran 2001; Gu et al. 2001) * many UW89 sources too weak to model their spectra, and many are Compton-thick (Risaliti et al. 1999)

  13. Luminosity differences • HBLRs tend to be more luminous • higher nuclear luminosity explains S25/S60 results (Alexander 2001; Lumsden et al. 2001; Gu & Huang 2002) • nucleus/host galaxy contrast effect? (Kay 1994; Lumsden & Alexander 2001) • do luminosity differences establish that non-HBLR objects are “true” Seyfert 2s (Tran 2003)? • before you decide, remember: spectropolarimetry is hard!

  14. NGC 5929 near misses! but bigger is better!

  15. [O III] equivalent width as a contrast indicator • Lumsden et al. (2001) UW89 sample

  16. Alternatives to simple orientation • low-luminosity = no BLR? (Tran 2003) • accretion-rate issues? (Nicastro et al. 2003) * BLR absent in low m objects * possible candidates exist (e.g., Tran 2005) * HBLRs in some LINERs? (Barth et al. 1999) • dust lanes? (e.g., Malkan, Matt, Guainazzi, Lamastra et al.) * many UW89 non-HBLRs have high NH * 4/7 UW89 objects with log NH < 23 have HBLRs... torus * dust lanes could obscure fraction of UW89 non-HBLRs • non-HBLRs as edge-on NLS1s? (Zhang & Wang 2006) •

  17. Summary • ~ 50% of Seyfert 2s have polarized broad lines • some luminosity differences exist between HBLRs and non-HBLRs * but much overlap between the two types * much overlap in EW([O III]) as well * luminosity or contrast alone can’t explain polarization results • take care when interpreting spectropolatimetry non-detections * many reasons why techniques might not work * possibility that more HBLRs will turn up in deeper observaton is very real

  18. NGC 2110

  19. Elliptical disk fit

  20. Early results from Lick Observatory • NGC 1068: Miller & Antonucci (1983); Antonucci & Miller (1985); Miller, Goodrich, & Mathews (1991) • 4 more hidden broad-line regions (HBLRs) among high- polarization Seyfert 2s: Miller & Goodrich (1990) • Continuum polarizations of Seyfert 2s low, and starlight fractions high: Kay (1990; 1994) • 4 more HBLRs: Tran, Miller, & Kay (1992) • Detailed study of 10 HBLR Seyfert 2s – complex continua and dominance of electron scattering: Tran (1995)

  21. in the plane of the scattering... in the plane of the sky... q Why a torus? Polarization suggests • radiation field anisotropic prior to scattering • obscuration cylindrically symmetric, roughly

  22. Hard X-ray evidence NGC 788 Ghard = 1.70 log NH = 23.7

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