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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 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? • 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)
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
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
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
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)
Differences between HBLR and Non-HBLR Seyfert 2s? Moran et al. (1992)
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
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
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)
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)
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!
NGC 5929 near misses! but bigger is better!
[O III] equivalent width as a contrast indicator • Lumsden et al. (2001) UW89 sample
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) •
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
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)
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
Hard X-ray evidence NGC 788 Ghard = 1.70 log NH = 23.7