论文标题
通过空间分辨光谱法进行活性银河核的更完整的光学普查
Towards a More Complete Optical Census of Active Galactic Nuclei, Via Spatially-Resolved Spectroscopy
论文作者
论文摘要
虽然发射线的通量比诊断是在光谱中识别活性银河核(AGN)的最常见技术,而将这种方法应用于星系的单光纤光谱可以忽略AGN的整个亚群。 Here, we use spatially resolved spectroscopy from the Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) survey to construct a sample of 10 galaxies where Baldwin-Philips-Terlevich line flux ratio diagnostics classify each galaxy's central $3^{\prime\prime}$ spectrum as LINER or star forming, while $>10\%$ of the spaxels in the galaxy's漫画足迹被归类为Seyfert。我们获得了与核外seefert区域的这10个星系的观测值,以确定它们是否实际上存在AGN。我们的主要结果是,星系的7-10(取决于标准的严格性)载有一个或多个X射线AGN,即使没有一个基于单纤维光谱将它们归为AGN。我们发现这些AGN在单纤维光谱中未鉴定,因为它们是伴侣星系的核,低光度AGN,灰尘遮盖的AGN和/或闪烁的AGN的AGN。总而言之,我们发现,核外AGN特征可能会使已知AGN的数量增加两个倍,而不是传统的单核光纤光谱所识别的。我们的结果表明,可以利用空间分辨的光谱法揭示了单纤维光谱传统上遗漏的AGN的更完整的普查。
While emission-line flux ratio diagnostics are the most common technique for identifying active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in optical spectra, applying this approach to single fiber spectra of galaxies can omit entire subpopulations of AGNs. Here, we use spatially resolved spectroscopy from the Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) survey to construct a sample of 10 galaxies where Baldwin-Philips-Terlevich line flux ratio diagnostics classify each galaxy's central $3^{\prime\prime}$ spectrum as LINER or star forming, while $>10\%$ of the spaxels in the galaxy's MaNGA footprint are classified as Seyfert. We obtain Chandra observations of these 10 galaxies with off-nuclear Seyfert regions to determine whether AGNs are actually present in them. Our main result is that 7-10 (depending on strictness of criteria) of the galaxies host one or more X-ray AGNs, even though none of them were classified as AGNs based on their single-fiber optical spectra. We find that these AGNs were not identified in the single-fiber spectra because they are AGNs in the nuclei of companion galaxies, low luminosity AGNs, dust obscured AGNs, and/or flickering AGNs. In summary, we find that off-nuclear AGN signatures may increase the number of known AGNs by a factor of two over what conventional single nuclear fiber spectra identify. Our results show that spatially resolved spectroscopy can be leveraged to reveal a more complete census of AGNs that are traditionally missed by single fiber spectra.