Loading…

The nature of the IR emission in LLAGN at parsec scales

The vast majority of AGN belong to the low-luminosity class (LLAGN): they exhibit a low radiation effciency (L ≲ 1042 erg s−1; L/Ledd ≲ 10−3) and the absence of the big blue bump in their spectrum, a signature of the accretion disk. The study of LLAGN is a complex task due to the contribution of the...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:EPJ Web of conferences 2013-12, Vol.61, p.04005
Main Authors: Fernández-Ontiveros Juan Antonio, Almudena Prieto M., Acosta-Pulido Jose Antonio, Markoff Sera, González-Martín Omaira
Format: Article
Language:English
Citations: Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The vast majority of AGN belong to the low-luminosity class (LLAGN): they exhibit a low radiation effciency (L ≲ 1042 erg s−1; L/Ledd ≲ 10−3) and the absence of the big blue bump in their spectrum, a signature of the accretion disk. The study of LLAGN is a complex task due to the contribution of the host galaxy, whose light outshines these faint nuclei. As a consequence, numerical models are usually compared with relatively poorly defined spectral energy distributions (SEDs). For a sample of six prototype nearby LLAGN, a multiwavelength dataset including radio, IR, optical/UV and X-ray measurements with a few tenths of arcsec resolution has been collected. These high-spatial resolution SEDs reveal that: i) the mid-IR bump, indicative of thermal emission from the torus, is missing in LLAGN; ii) the continuum emission of these nuclei is largely described by a self-absorbed synchrotron spectrum, suggesting that jet emission dominates the overall energy output in these objects. The optically thin radiation in the IR-to-UV range is produced in the jet launching region, very close to the central black hole. The very steep slope found in this component –with a spectral index in the 1-3 range– suggests that a large number of LLAGN are powered by young and compact jets with very high radiative losses.
ISSN:2100-014X
DOI:10.1051/epjconf/20136104005