SAO: A New Paradigm for Active Galactic Nuclei

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SAO: A New Paradigm for Active Galactic Nuclei

Postby bystander » Mon Apr 23, 2012 5:48 pm

A New Paradigm for Active Galactic Nuclei
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
Weekly Science Update | 2012 Apr 20
Seyfert galaxies are similar to normal galaxies like our own Milky Way except in one critical respect: their nuclei are fantastically bright, in extreme instances as luminous as 100 billion suns. Astronomers think that these huge energies are generated in such active galactic nuclei by processes around their massive black holes. Matter, as it falls in towards the vicinity of a black hole, heats up and radiates intensely. The Milky Way also has a massive black hole at its center, and there is evidence that some matter is falling in towards it, but for reasons that are not understood the center of our galaxy is not particularly bright as compared to its star-filled spiral arms.

Optical observations find two morphological types of Seyfert galaxies: some with bright spectral lines from excited atoms moving at high velocities, and others lacking this characteristic radiation. The most popular explanation has been that both kinds of objects are intrinsically the same, both with active accretion underway, but in the latter cases a torus (or disk) of dust around the nuclei obscures the light from those atoms when the galaxy happens to be seen edgewise from the Earth. In this interpretation, the different kinds of Seyfert galaxies are simply a reflection of their different orientations in the sky. This idea simplifies the overall scheme of galaxy types.

This model received strong support when astronomers were able to spot faint hints of that characteristic radiation in some edge-on galaxies, the implication being that radiation from a hidden but active region had leaked out the poles of the obscuring torus and was scattered towards us. The problem has been that more sensitive observations have now probed a larger sample of Seyferts, and found that many of them do not fit into either of these two categories. In fact, only about half of the bright, nominally edge-on Seyferts show any evidence of scattered radiation from an obscured, inner region. As a result, for about ten years scientists have been gathering evidence that something other than geometry is responsible for the difference between these galaxies.

CfA astronomers Andrea Marinucci, Fabrizio Nicastro, and Andy Goulding, with two colleagues, have published a new paper arguing that indeed something else is probably going on, and the standard paradigm needs fixing. They prepared a comparatively large sample of thirty-nine Seyferts thought to be edge-on, and for which a wide range of data were available. The sample consisted of two groups, one composed of the half of the sources showing evidence for faint, scattered nuclear radiation, and the other one with the half showing no such evidence. The scientists compared the sample's X-ray and optical data, the inferred masses of their black holes, and their luminosities.

The team found that the two groups of galaxies, as groups, had consistently different characteristics. Active accretion was underway only in the set showing the faint characteristic radiation; the other set lacked this scattered light not because the torus was opaque, but because there was little or no activity underway as evidenced by their lower luminosities as well as some other features. These conclusions need to be confirmed with larger samples, but the results suggest that details of accretion mechanism(s) need to be included in the categorization of Seyfert galaxies, and perhaps also of other galaxies with activity around their nuclear black holes.

The Link Between the Hidden Broad Line Region and the Accretion Rate in Seyfert 2 Galaxies - Andrea Marinucci et al

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SAO: Accreting Black Holes in Galaxies

Postby bystander » Sat Jun 30, 2012 7:47 pm

Accreting Black Holes in Galaxies
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
Weekly Science Update | 2012 Jun 08
Seyfert galaxies are like normal galaxies, our own Milky Way included, except in one critical respect: their nuclei are fantastically bright. In some instances they are as luminous as 100 billion Suns, though even the weakest Seyfert nuclei are as luminous as a million Suns. Scientists believe that these huge energies are being generated by a massive black hole in the nucleus, not an ensemble of stars. Matter, as it falls in towards the vicinity of the black hole, heats up and glows intensely. Astronomers think our Milky Way also has a massive black hole at its center, but (for reasons that are not yet entirely understood) our galactic center is not particularly bright.

There seem to be two types of Seyfert galaxies: those whose bright nuclei also emit light from highly excited atoms moving at high velocities (providing evidence for extreme conditions) and those without these atomic lines. The most widely accepted explanation for these two types is the so-called "unification model": The galaxies are intrinsically the same, but in the former the disk-like galaxy is seen face on and its nucleus is visible, while in the latter the galaxy is seen edge-on and the nucleus and its atomic emission is obscured by dust.

In the decades since it was first proposed, the unification model has gradually encountered increasing criticism from astronomers who argue that there may also be something physical going on to create the different kinds of Seyferts. CfA astronomers Andrea Marinucci, Fabrizio Nicastro, and Andy Goulding, with two colleagues, have analyzed data on a set of thirty-nine Seyferts using what they consider more reliable measures of the nuclear activity in the atomic lines. They provide evidence in the latest issue of the Astrophysical Journal that the accretion rate also differs in the two types. If confirmed, this conclusion would mean that there are physical differences between objects in the Seyfert family, and that viewing angle is not the only story.

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