75 research outputs found
Comparison of AGN and Nuclear Starburst Activity in Seyfert 1 and 2 Galaxies over a Wide Luminosity Range Based on Near-infrared 2-4 micrometer Spectroscopy
We present near-infrared K- (1.9-2.5 micrometer) and L- (2.8-4.2 micrometer)
band spectroscopy of 22 Seyfert nuclei. We use two methods to investigate the
presence of nuclear starbursts: (1) the Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH)
emission feature at lambda_rest = 3.3 micrometer in the rest frame of L-band
spectrum (a starburst indicator) and (2) the CO absorption feature at
lambda_rest = 2.3-2.4 micrometer in the rest frame of the K-band spectrum,
originating in the CO molecule. We clearly detected the 3.3 micrometer PAH
emission features in five objects and the CO absorption features in 17 objects.
Seyfert 2 galaxies tend to show bluer K-L colors compared with Seyfert 1
galaxies. We interpret the discrepancy as resulting from relative strength of
stellar emission because AGN emission is affected by dust extinction. The 3.3
micrometer PAH emission luminosity (L_3.3PAH) distributions for the Seyfert 1s
and Seyfert 2s are very similar when normalized to the AGN power.
Star-formation rates estimated from L_3.3PAH could be large enough to inflate
the dusty torus by supernova explosion. We find that L_3.3PAH positively
correlates with N-band luminosity with small aperture over a wide AGN
luminosity range, and is independent of physical area we probed. The results
suggest that nuclear region has a concentration of star formation and the star
formation would control AGN activity.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in PAS
Comparison of AGN and Nuclear Starburst Activity in Seyfert 1 and 2 Galaxies over a Wide Luminosity Range Based on Near-infrared 2-4 micrometer Spectroscopy
We present near-infrared K- (1.9-2.5 micrometer) and L- (2.8-4.2 micrometer)
band spectroscopy of 22 Seyfert nuclei. We use two methods to investigate the
presence of nuclear starbursts: (1) the Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH)
emission feature at lambda_rest = 3.3 micrometer in the rest frame of L-band
spectrum (a starburst indicator) and (2) the CO absorption feature at
lambda_rest = 2.3-2.4 micrometer in the rest frame of the K-band spectrum,
originating in the CO molecule. We clearly detected the 3.3 micrometer PAH
emission features in five objects and the CO absorption features in 17 objects.
Seyfert 2 galaxies tend to show bluer K-L colors compared with Seyfert 1
galaxies. We interpret the discrepancy as resulting from relative strength of
stellar emission because AGN emission is affected by dust extinction. The 3.3
micrometer PAH emission luminosity (L_3.3PAH) distributions for the Seyfert 1s
and Seyfert 2s are very similar when normalized to the AGN power.
Star-formation rates estimated from L_3.3PAH could be large enough to inflate
the dusty torus by supernova explosion. We find that L_3.3PAH positively
correlates with N-band luminosity with small aperture over a wide AGN
luminosity range, and is independent of physical area we probed. The results
suggest that nuclear region has a concentration of star formation and the star
formation would control AGN activity.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in PAS
Infrared 3-4 Micron Spectroscopy of Nearby PG QSOs and AGN-Nuclear Starburst Connections in High-luminosity AGN Populations
We present the results of infrared L-band (3-4 micron) slit spectroscopy of
30 PG QSOs at z < 0.17, the representative sample of local high-luminosity,
optically selected AGNs. The 3.3 micron polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)
emission feature is used to probe nuclear (< a few kpc) starburst activity and
to investigate the connections between AGNs and nuclear starbursts in PG QSOs.
The 3.3 micron PAH emission is detected in the individual spectra of 5/30 of
the observed PG QSOs. We construct a composite spectrum of PAH-undetected PG
QSOs and discern the presence of the 3.3 micron PAH emission therein. We
estimate the nuclear-starburst and AGN luminosities from the observed 3.3
micron PAH emission and 3.35 micron continuum luminosities, respectively, and
find that the nuclear-starburst-to-AGN luminosity ratios in PG QSOs are similar
to those of previously studied AGN populations with lower luminosities,
suggesting that AGN-nuclear starburst connections are valid over the wide
luminosity range of AGNs in the local universe. The observed
nuclear-starburst-to-AGN luminosity ratios in PG QSOs with available
supermassive black hole masses are comparable to a theoretical prediction based
on the assumption that the growth of a supermassive black hole is controlled by
starburst-induced turbulence.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ (No. 63, 2011
March, Subaru special issue
Predicting dust extinction properties of star-forming galaxies from H-alpha/UV ratio
Using star-forming galaxies sample in the nearby Universe (0.02<z<0.10)
selected from the SDSS (DR7) and GALEX all-sky survey (GR5), we present a new
empirical calibration for predicting dust extinction of galaxies from
H-alpha-to-FUV flux ratio. We find that the H-alpha dust extinction (A(Ha))
derived with H-alpha/H-beta ratio (Balmer decrement) increases with increasing
H-alpha/UV ratio as expected, but there remains a considerable scatter around
the relation, which is largely dependent on stellar mass and/or H-alpha
equivalent width (EW(Ha)). At fixed H-alpha/UV ratio, galaxies with higher
stellar mass (or galaxies with lower EW(Ha)) tend to be more highly obscured by
dust. We quantify this trend and establish an empirical calibration for
predicting A(Ha) with a combination of H-alpha/UV ratio, stellar mass and
EW(Ha), with which we can successfully reduce the systematic uncertainties
accompanying the simple H-alpha/UV approach by ~15-30%. The new recipes
proposed in this study will provide a convenient tool for predicting dust
extinction level of galaxies particularly when Balmer decrement is not
available. By comparing A(Ha) (derived with Balmer decrement) and A(UV)
(derived with IR/UV luminosity ratio) for a subsample of galaxies for which
AKARI FIR photometry is available, we demonstrate that more massive galaxies
tend to have higher extra extinction towards the nebular regions compared to
the stellar continuum light. Considering recent studies reporting smaller extra
extinction towards nebular regions for high-redshift galaxies, we argue that
the dust geometry within high-redshift galaxies resemble more like low-mass
galaxies in the nearby Universe.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
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