38 results on '"Jaffe, Walter"'
Search Results
2. The dusty heart of Circinus II. Scrutinizing the LM-band dust morphology using MATISSE
- Author
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Isbell, Jacob W., Pott, Jörg-Uwe, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Stalevski, Marko, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Leftley, James, Asmus, Daniel, Weigelt, Gerd, Rosas, Violeta Gámez, Petrov, Romain, Jaffe, Walter, Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Henning, Thomas, Lopez, Bruno, Isbell, Jacob W., Pott, Jörg-Uwe, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Stalevski, Marko, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Leftley, James, Asmus, Daniel, Weigelt, Gerd, Rosas, Violeta Gámez, Petrov, Romain, Jaffe, Walter, Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Henning, Thomas, and Lopez, Bruno
- Abstract
In this paper we present the first-ever $L$- and $M$-band interferometric observations of Circinus, building upon a recent $N$-band analysis. We used these observations to reconstruct images and fit Gaussian models to the $L$ and $M$ bands. Our findings reveal a thin edge-on disk whose width is marginally resolved and is the spectral continuation of the disk imaged in the $N$ band to shorter wavelengths. Additionally, we find a point-like source in the $L$ and $M$ bands that, based on the $LMN$-band spectral energy distribution fit, corresponds to the $N$-band point source. We also demonstrate that there is no trace of direct sightlines to hot dust surfaces in the circumnuclear dust structure of Circinus. By assuming the dust is present, we find that obscuration of A$_{\rm V} \gtrsim 250$ mag is necessary to reproduce the measured fluxes. Hence, the imaged disk could play the role of the obscuring "torus" in the unified scheme of active galactic nuclei. Furthermore, we explored the parameter space of the disk + hyperbolic cone radiative transfer models and identify a simple modification at the base of the cone. Adding a cluster of clumps just above the disk and inside the base of the hyperbolic cone provides a much better match to the observed temperature distribution in the central aperture. This aligns well with the radiation-driven fountain models that have recently emerged. Only the unique combination of sensitivity and spatial resolution of the VLTI allows such models to be scrutinized and constrained in detail. We plan to test the applicability of this detailed dust structure to other MATISSE-observed active galactic nuclei in the future., Comment: Main article: 12 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2205.01575
- Published
- 2023
3. Chromatically modelling the parsec scale dusty structure in the centre of NGC1068
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Leftley, James, Petrov, Romain, Moszczynski, Niklas, Vermot, Pierre, Hoenig, Sebastian, Rosas, Violeta Gamez, Isbell, Jacob, Jaffe, Walter, Clenet, Yann, Augereau, Jean-Charles, Berio, Philippe, Davies, Richard, Henning, Thomas, Lagarde, Stephane, Lopez, Bruno, Matter, Alexis, Meilland, Anthony, Millour, Florentin, Nesvadba, Nicole, Shimizu, Taro, Sturm, Eckhard, Weigelt, Gerd, Leftley, James, Petrov, Romain, Moszczynski, Niklas, Vermot, Pierre, Hoenig, Sebastian, Rosas, Violeta Gamez, Isbell, Jacob, Jaffe, Walter, Clenet, Yann, Augereau, Jean-Charles, Berio, Philippe, Davies, Richard, Henning, Thomas, Lagarde, Stephane, Lopez, Bruno, Matter, Alexis, Meilland, Anthony, Millour, Florentin, Nesvadba, Nicole, Shimizu, Taro, Sturm, Eckhard, and Weigelt, Gerd
- Abstract
The Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) has been providing breakthrough images of the dust in the central parsecs of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), a key component of the AGN unification scheme and AGN host galaxy interaction. In single IR bands, the images can have multiple interpretations some of which could challenge the unification scheme. This is the case for the archetypal type 2 AGN of NGC1068. The ambiguity is reduced by multi-band temperature maps which are hindered by uncertainty in intra-band alignment. We create a chromatic model capable of simultaneously explaining the VLTI GRAVITY+MATISSE 2$\mu$m-13$\mu$m observations of the AGN in NGC1068. We use a simple disk and wind geometry populated with spherical black body emitters and dust obscuration to create a versatile multi-wavelength model for IR interferometric data of dusty objects. This simple geometry is capable of reproducing the K-N-band VLTI data, explains the complex single band images, and solves the alignment between bands. We find that the resulting geometry is consistent with previous studies. Compared to molecular gas emission, our model wind position angle (PA) of $22^3_2{\deg}$ is close to the mas scale outflowing CO(6-5) PA of ~33{\deg} seen with the ALMA. The equivalent 90{\deg} offset model disk PA is also consistent with the CO(6-5) disk axis of 112{\deg} as well as the mas scale disk axis from CO(2-1), CO(3-2), and HCO$^+$(4-3) of 115$\pm$5{\deg}. Furthermore, the resulting model visually resembles the equivalent achromatic image reconstructions. We conclude that the IR emitting structure surrounding the AGN can indeed be explained by the clumpy disk+wind iteration of the AGN unification scheme. Within the scheme, we find it is best explained as a type 2 and the obscuring dust chemistry is consistent with a mix of olivine silicates and 16$\pm$1% amorphous carbon., Comment: 15 pages, 19 appendix pages, 23 figures, and 2 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2023
4. Thermal imaging of dust hiding the black hole in NGC1068
- Author
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Rosas, Violeta Gamez, Isbell, Jacob W., Jaffe, Walter, Petrov, Romain G., Leftley, James H., Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Millour, Florentin, Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Meilland, Anthony, Waters, Laurens B. F. M., Lopez, Bruno, Lagarde, Stephane, Weigelt, Gerd, Berio, Philippe, Allouche, Fatme, Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie, Cruzalebes, Pierre, Bettonvil, Felix, Henning, Thomas, Augereau, Jean-Charles, Antonelli, Pierre, Beckmann, Udo, van Boekel, Roy, Bendjoya, Philippe, Danchi, William C., Dominik, Carsten, Drevon, Julien, Gallimore, Jack F., Graser, Uwe, Heininger, Matthias, Hocde, Vincent, Hogerheijde, Michiel, Hron, Josef, Impellizzeri, Caterina M., V, Klarmann, Lucia, Kokoulina, Elena, Labadie, Lucas, Lehmitz, Michael, Matter, Alexis, Paladini, Claudia, Pantin, Eric, Pott, Joerg-Uwe, Schertl, Dieter, Soulain, Anthony, Stee, Philippe, Tristram, Konrad, Varga, Jozsef, Woillez, Julien, Wolf, Sebastian, Yoffe, Gideon, Zins, Gerard, Rosas, Violeta Gamez, Isbell, Jacob W., Jaffe, Walter, Petrov, Romain G., Leftley, James H., Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Millour, Florentin, Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Meilland, Anthony, Waters, Laurens B. F. M., Lopez, Bruno, Lagarde, Stephane, Weigelt, Gerd, Berio, Philippe, Allouche, Fatme, Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie, Cruzalebes, Pierre, Bettonvil, Felix, Henning, Thomas, Augereau, Jean-Charles, Antonelli, Pierre, Beckmann, Udo, van Boekel, Roy, Bendjoya, Philippe, Danchi, William C., Dominik, Carsten, Drevon, Julien, Gallimore, Jack F., Graser, Uwe, Heininger, Matthias, Hocde, Vincent, Hogerheijde, Michiel, Hron, Josef, Impellizzeri, Caterina M., V, Klarmann, Lucia, Kokoulina, Elena, Labadie, Lucas, Lehmitz, Michael, Matter, Alexis, Paladini, Claudia, Pantin, Eric, Pott, Joerg-Uwe, Schertl, Dieter, Soulain, Anthony, Stee, Philippe, Tristram, Konrad, Varga, Jozsef, Woillez, Julien, Wolf, Sebastian, Yoffe, Gideon, and Zins, Gerard
- Abstract
In the widely accepted 'unified model'(1) solution of the classification puzzle of active galactic nuclei, the orientation of a dusty accretion torus around the central black hole dominates their appearance. In 'type-1' systems, the bright nucleus is visible at the centre of a face-on torus. In 'type-2' systems the thick, nearly edge-on torus hides the central engine. Later studies suggested evolutionary effects(2) and added dusty clumps and polar winds(3) but left the basic picture intact. However, recent high-resolution images(4) of the archetypal type-2 galaxy NGC 1068(5,6), suggested a more radical revision. The images displayed a ring-like emission feature that was proposed to be hot dust surrounding the black hole at the radius where the radiation from the central engine evaporates the dust. That ring is too thin and too far tilted from edge-on to hide the central engine, and ad hoc foreground extinction is needed to explain thetype-2 classification. These images quickly generated reinterpretations of the dichotomy between types 1 and 2(7,8). Here we present new multi-band mid-infrared images of NGC 1068 that detail the dust temperature distribution and reaffirm the original model. Combined with radio data (J.F.G. and C.M.V.I., manuscript in preparation), our maps locate the central engine that is below the previously reported ring and obscured by a thick, nearly edge-on disk, as predicted by the unified model. We also identify emission from polar flows and absorbing dust that is mineralogically distinct from that towards the Milky Way centre.
- Published
- 2022
5. Locating dust and molecules in the inner circumstellar environment of R~Sculptoris with MATISSE
- Author
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Drevon, Julien, Millour, Florentin, Cruzalèbes, Pierre, Paladini, Claudia, Hron, Josef, Meilland, A., Allouche, F., Hofmann, K. -H., Lagarde, S., Lopez, B., Matter, A., Petrov, R., Robbe-Dubois, S., Schertl, D., Wittkowski, M., Zins, G., Ábrahám, P., Antonelli, P., Beckmann, U., Berio, P., Bettonvil, F., Glindemann, A., Graser, U., Heininger, M., Henning, Thomas, Isbell, Jacob W., Jaffe, Walter, Labadie, Lucas, Leinert, Christoph, Lehmitz, Michael, Morel, Sébastien, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Soulain, Anthony, Varga, Josef, Weigelt, Gerd, Woillez, Julien, Augereau, Jean-Charles, van Boekel, Roy, Burtscher, Leonard, Danchi, William, Dominik, Carsten, Gamez-Rosas, Violetta, Hocdé, Vincent, Hogerheijde, M., Klarmann, Lucia, Kokoulina, Elena, Leftley, James, Stee, Ph., Vakili, Farrokh, Waters, Rens, Wolf, Sebastian, Yoffe, Gideon, Drevon, Julien, Millour, Florentin, Cruzalèbes, Pierre, Paladini, Claudia, Hron, Josef, Meilland, A., Allouche, F., Hofmann, K. -H., Lagarde, S., Lopez, B., Matter, A., Petrov, R., Robbe-Dubois, S., Schertl, D., Wittkowski, M., Zins, G., Ábrahám, P., Antonelli, P., Beckmann, U., Berio, P., Bettonvil, F., Glindemann, A., Graser, U., Heininger, M., Henning, Thomas, Isbell, Jacob W., Jaffe, Walter, Labadie, Lucas, Leinert, Christoph, Lehmitz, Michael, Morel, Sébastien, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Soulain, Anthony, Varga, Josef, Weigelt, Gerd, Woillez, Julien, Augereau, Jean-Charles, van Boekel, Roy, Burtscher, Leonard, Danchi, William, Dominik, Carsten, Gamez-Rosas, Violetta, Hocdé, Vincent, Hogerheijde, M., Klarmann, Lucia, Kokoulina, Elena, Leftley, James, Stee, Ph., Vakili, Farrokh, Waters, Rens, Wolf, Sebastian, and Yoffe, Gideon
- Abstract
AGB stars are one of the main sources of dust production in the Galaxy. However, it is not clear what this process looks like and where the dust is condensing in the circumstellar environment. By characterizing the location of the dust and the molecules in the close environment of an AGB star, we aim to achieve a better understanding the history of the dust formation process. We observed the carbon star R Scl with the VLTI-MATISSE instrument in L- and N-bands. The high angular resolution of the VLTI observations, combined with a large uv-plane coverage allowed us to use image reconstruction methods. To constrain the dust and molecules' location, we used two different methods: MIRA image reconstruction and the 1D code RHAPSODY. We found evidence of C2H2 and HCN molecules between 1 and 3.4 Rstar which is much closer to the star than the location of the dust (between 3.8 and 17.0 Rstar). We also estimated a mass-loss rate of 1.2+-0.4x10-6 Msun per yr. In the meantime, we confirmed the previously published characteristics of a thin dust shell, composed of amorphous carbon (amC) and silicon carbide (SiC). However, no clear SiC feature has been detected in the MATISSE visibilities. This might be caused by molecular absorption that can affect the shape of the SiC band at 11.3 micron. The appearance of the molecular shells is in good agreement with predictions from dynamical atmosphere models. For the first time, we co-located dust and molecules in the environment of an AGB star. We confirm that the molecules are located closer to the star than the dust. The MIRA images unveil the presence of a clumpy environment in the fuzzy emission region beyond 4.0 Rstar. Furthermore, with the available dynamic range and angular resolution, we did not detect the presence of a binary companion. Additional observations combining MATISSE and SAM-VISIR instrument should enable this detection in future studies., Comment: 19 pages, published in A&A
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The dusty heart of Circinus: I. Imaging the circumnuclear dust in N-band
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Isbell, Jacob W., Meisenheimer, Klaus, Pott, Jörg-Uwe, Stalevski, Marko, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Sanchez-Bermudez, Joel, Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Rosas, Violeta Gámez, Jaffe, Walter, Burtscher, Leonard, Leftley, James, Petrov, Romain, Lopez, Bruno, Henning, Thomas, Weigelt, Gerd, Allouche, Fatme, Berio, Philippe, Bettonvil, Felix, Cruzalebes, Pierre, Dominik, Carsten, Heininger, Matthias, Hogerheijde, Michiel, Lagarde, Stéphane, Lehmitz, Michael, Matter, Alexis, Millour, Florentin, Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie, Schertl, Dieter, van Boekel, Roy, Varga, Josef, Woillez, Julien, Isbell, Jacob W., Meisenheimer, Klaus, Pott, Jörg-Uwe, Stalevski, Marko, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Sanchez-Bermudez, Joel, Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Rosas, Violeta Gámez, Jaffe, Walter, Burtscher, Leonard, Leftley, James, Petrov, Romain, Lopez, Bruno, Henning, Thomas, Weigelt, Gerd, Allouche, Fatme, Berio, Philippe, Bettonvil, Felix, Cruzalebes, Pierre, Dominik, Carsten, Heininger, Matthias, Hogerheijde, Michiel, Lagarde, Stéphane, Lehmitz, Michael, Matter, Alexis, Millour, Florentin, Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie, Schertl, Dieter, van Boekel, Roy, Varga, Josef, and Woillez, Julien
- Abstract
Active galactic nuclei play a key role in the evolution of galaxies, but their inner workings and physical connection to the host are poorly understood due to a lack of angular resolution. Infrared interferometry makes it possible to resolve the circumnuclear dust in the nearby Seyfert 2 galaxy, Circinus. Previous observations have revealed complex structures and polar dust emission but interpretation was limited to simple models. MATISSE makes it possible to image these structures for the first time. We observed the Circinus Galaxy with VLTI/MATISSE, producing 150 correlated flux spectra and 100 closure phase spectra. We reconstructed images in the N-band at ~10 mas resolution. We fit blackbody functions with dust extinction to several aperture-extracted fluxes from the images to produce a temperature distribution of central dusty structures. We find significant substructure in the circumnuclear dust: central unresolved flux of ~0.5 Jy, a thin disk 1.9 pc in diameter oriented along ~45 deg,and a ~4x1.5 pc polar emission extending orthogonal to the disk. The polar emission exhibits patchiness, which we attribute to clumpy dust. Flux enhancements to the east and west of the disk are seen for the first time. We distinguish the temperature profiles of the disk and of the polar emission: the disk shows a steep temperature gradient indicative of denser material; the polar profile is flatter, indicating clumpiness and/or lower dust density. The unresolved flux is fitted with a high temperature, ~370 K. The polar dust remains warm (~200 K) out to 1.5 pc from the disk. The recovered morphology and temperature distribution resembles modeling of accretion disks with radiation-driven winds at large scales, but we placed new constraints on the subparsec dust. The subparsec features imaged here place new constraints on the physical modeling of circumnuclear dust in active galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Thermal imaging of dust hiding the black hole in the Active Galaxy NGC 1068
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Rosas, Violeta Gamez, Isbell, Jacob W., Jaffe, Walter, Petrov, Romain G., Leftley, James H., Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Millour, Florentin, Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Meilland, Anthony, Waters, Laurens B. F. M., Lopez, Bruno, Lagarde, Stephane, Weigelt, Gerd, Berio, Philippe, Allouche, Fatme, Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie, Cruzalebes, Pierre, Bettonvil, Felix, Henning, Thomas, Augereau, Jean-Charles, Antonelli, Pierre, Beckmann, Udo, van Boekel, Roy, Bendjoya, Philippe, Danchi, William C., Dominik, Carsten, Drevon, Julien, Gallimore, Jack F., Graser, Uwe, Heininger, Matthias, Hocde, Vincent, Hogerheijde, Michiel, Hron1, Josef, Impellizzeri, Caterina M. V., Klarmann, Lucia, Kokoulina, Elena, Labadie, Lucas, Lehmitz, Michael, Matter, Alexis, Paladini, Claudia, Pantin, Eric, Pott, Jorg-Uwe, Schert, Dieter, Soulain, Anthony, Stee, Philippe, Tristram, Konrad, Varga, Jozsef, Woillez, Julien, Wolf, Sebastian, Yoffe, Gideon, Zins, Gerard, Rosas, Violeta Gamez, Isbell, Jacob W., Jaffe, Walter, Petrov, Romain G., Leftley, James H., Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Millour, Florentin, Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Meilland, Anthony, Waters, Laurens B. F. M., Lopez, Bruno, Lagarde, Stephane, Weigelt, Gerd, Berio, Philippe, Allouche, Fatme, Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie, Cruzalebes, Pierre, Bettonvil, Felix, Henning, Thomas, Augereau, Jean-Charles, Antonelli, Pierre, Beckmann, Udo, van Boekel, Roy, Bendjoya, Philippe, Danchi, William C., Dominik, Carsten, Drevon, Julien, Gallimore, Jack F., Graser, Uwe, Heininger, Matthias, Hocde, Vincent, Hogerheijde, Michiel, Hron1, Josef, Impellizzeri, Caterina M. V., Klarmann, Lucia, Kokoulina, Elena, Labadie, Lucas, Lehmitz, Michael, Matter, Alexis, Paladini, Claudia, Pantin, Eric, Pott, Jorg-Uwe, Schert, Dieter, Soulain, Anthony, Stee, Philippe, Tristram, Konrad, Varga, Jozsef, Woillez, Julien, Wolf, Sebastian, Yoffe, Gideon, and Zins, Gerard
- Abstract
In the widely accepted 'Unified Model' solution of the classification puzzle of Active Galactic Nuclei, the orientation of a dusty accretion torus around the central black hole dominates their appearance. In 'type-1' systems, the bright nucleus is visible at the centre of a face-on torus. In 'type-2' systems the thick, nearly edge-on torus hides the central engine. Later studies suggested evolutionary effects and added dusty clumps and polar winds but left the basic picture intact. However, recent high-resolution images of the archetypal type-2 galaxy NGC 1068 suggested a more radical revision. They displayed a ring-like emission feature which the authors advocated to be hot dust surrounding the black hole at the radius where the radiation from the central engine evaporates the dust. That ring is too thin and too far tilted from edge-on to hide the central engine, and ad hoc foreground extinction is needed to explain the type-2 classification. These images quickly generated reinterpretations of the type 1-2 dichotomy. Here we present new multi-band mid-infrared images of NGC1068 that detail the dust temperature distribution and reaffirm the original model. Combined with radio data, our maps locate the central engine below the previously reported ring and obscured by a thick, nearly edge-on disk, as predicted by the Unified Model. We also identify emission from polar flows and absorbing dust that is mineralogically distinct from that towards the Milky Way centre., Comment: In press at Nature
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Thermal imaging of dust hiding the black hole in the Active Galaxy NGC 1068
- Author
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Rosas, Violeta Gamez, Isbell, Jacob W., Jaffe, Walter, Petrov, Romain G., Leftley, James H., Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Millour, Florentin, Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Meilland, Anthony, Waters, Laurens B. F. M., Lopez, Bruno, Lagarde, Stephane, Weigelt, Gerd, Berio, Philippe, Allouche, Fatme, Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie, Cruzalebes, Pierre, Bettonvil, Felix, Henning, Thomas, Augereau, Jean-Charles, Antonelli, Pierre, Beckmann, Udo, van Boekel, Roy, Bendjoya, Philippe, Danchi, William C., Dominik, Carsten, Drevon, Julien, Gallimore, Jack F., Graser, Uwe, Heininger, Matthias, Hocde, Vincent, Hogerheijde, Michiel, Hron1, Josef, Impellizzeri, Caterina M. V., Klarmann, Lucia, Kokoulina, Elena, Labadie, Lucas, Lehmitz, Michael, Matter, Alexis, Paladini, Claudia, Pantin, Eric, Pott, Jorg-Uwe, Schert, Dieter, Soulain, Anthony, Stee, Philippe, Tristram, Konrad, Varga, Jozsef, Woillez, Julien, Wolf, Sebastian, Yoffe, Gideon, Zins, Gerard, Rosas, Violeta Gamez, Isbell, Jacob W., Jaffe, Walter, Petrov, Romain G., Leftley, James H., Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Millour, Florentin, Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Meilland, Anthony, Waters, Laurens B. F. M., Lopez, Bruno, Lagarde, Stephane, Weigelt, Gerd, Berio, Philippe, Allouche, Fatme, Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie, Cruzalebes, Pierre, Bettonvil, Felix, Henning, Thomas, Augereau, Jean-Charles, Antonelli, Pierre, Beckmann, Udo, van Boekel, Roy, Bendjoya, Philippe, Danchi, William C., Dominik, Carsten, Drevon, Julien, Gallimore, Jack F., Graser, Uwe, Heininger, Matthias, Hocde, Vincent, Hogerheijde, Michiel, Hron1, Josef, Impellizzeri, Caterina M. V., Klarmann, Lucia, Kokoulina, Elena, Labadie, Lucas, Lehmitz, Michael, Matter, Alexis, Paladini, Claudia, Pantin, Eric, Pott, Jorg-Uwe, Schert, Dieter, Soulain, Anthony, Stee, Philippe, Tristram, Konrad, Varga, Jozsef, Woillez, Julien, Wolf, Sebastian, Yoffe, Gideon, and Zins, Gerard
- Abstract
In the widely accepted 'Unified Model' solution of the classification puzzle of Active Galactic Nuclei, the orientation of a dusty accretion torus around the central black hole dominates their appearance. In 'type-1' systems, the bright nucleus is visible at the centre of a face-on torus. In 'type-2' systems the thick, nearly edge-on torus hides the central engine. Later studies suggested evolutionary effects and added dusty clumps and polar winds but left the basic picture intact. However, recent high-resolution images of the archetypal type-2 galaxy NGC 1068 suggested a more radical revision. They displayed a ring-like emission feature which the authors advocated to be hot dust surrounding the black hole at the radius where the radiation from the central engine evaporates the dust. That ring is too thin and too far tilted from edge-on to hide the central engine, and ad hoc foreground extinction is needed to explain the type-2 classification. These images quickly generated reinterpretations of the type 1-2 dichotomy. Here we present new multi-band mid-infrared images of NGC1068 that detail the dust temperature distribution and reaffirm the original model. Combined with radio data, our maps locate the central engine below the previously reported ring and obscured by a thick, nearly edge-on disk, as predicted by the Unified Model. We also identify emission from polar flows and absorbing dust that is mineralogically distinct from that towards the Milky Way centre., Comment: In press at Nature
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Constraining the gap size in the disk around HD 100546 in the mid-infrared
- Author
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Jamialahmadi, Narges, Ratzka, Thorsten, Panic, Olja, Fathivavsari, Hassan, Van Boekel, Roy, Flement, Sebastien, Hening, Thomas, Jaffe, Walter, Mulders, Gijs, Jamialahmadi, Narges, Ratzka, Thorsten, Panic, Olja, Fathivavsari, Hassan, Van Boekel, Roy, Flement, Sebastien, Hening, Thomas, Jaffe, Walter, and Mulders, Gijs
- Abstract
We refine the gap size measurements of the disk surrounding the Herbig Ae star HD 100546 in the N band. Our new mid-infrared interferometric (MIDI) data have been taken with the UT baselines and span the full range of orientations. The correlated fluxes show a wavy pattern in which the minima separation links to a geometrical structure in the disk. We fit each correlated flux measurement with a spline function, deriving the corresponding spatial scale, while assuming that the pattern arises interferometrically due to the bright emission from the inner disk and the opposing sides of the wall of the outer disk. We then fit an ellipse to the derived separations at their corresponding position angles, thereby using the observations to constrain the disk inclination to i =47 +/- 1 degree and the disk position angle to PA =135.0 +/- 2.5 degree East of North, both of which are consistent with the estimated values in previous studies. We also derive the radius of the ellipse to 15.7 +/- 0.8 au. To confirm that the minima separations translate to a geometrical structure in the disk, we model the disk of HD 100546 using a semi-analytical approach taking into account the temperature and optical depth gradients. Using this model, we simultaneously reproduce the level and the minima of the correlated fluxes and constrain the gap size of the disk for each observation. The values obtained for the projected gap size in different orientations are consistent with the separation found by the geometrical model., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal. 10 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Constraining the gap size in the disk around HD 100546 in the mid-infrared
- Author
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Jamialahmadi, Narges, Ratzka, Thorsten, Panic, Olja, Fathivavsari, Hassan, Van Boekel, Roy, Flement, Sebastien, Hening, Thomas, Jaffe, Walter, Mulders, Gijs, Jamialahmadi, Narges, Ratzka, Thorsten, Panic, Olja, Fathivavsari, Hassan, Van Boekel, Roy, Flement, Sebastien, Hening, Thomas, Jaffe, Walter, and Mulders, Gijs
- Abstract
We refine the gap size measurements of the disk surrounding the Herbig Ae star HD 100546 in the N band. Our new mid-infrared interferometric (MIDI) data have been taken with the UT baselines and span the full range of orientations. The correlated fluxes show a wavy pattern in which the minima separation links to a geometrical structure in the disk. We fit each correlated flux measurement with a spline function, deriving the corresponding spatial scale, while assuming that the pattern arises interferometrically due to the bright emission from the inner disk and the opposing sides of the wall of the outer disk. We then fit an ellipse to the derived separations at their corresponding position angles, thereby using the observations to constrain the disk inclination to i =47 +/- 1 degree and the disk position angle to PA =135.0 +/- 2.5 degree East of North, both of which are consistent with the estimated values in previous studies. We also derive the radius of the ellipse to 15.7 +/- 0.8 au. To confirm that the minima separations translate to a geometrical structure in the disk, we model the disk of HD 100546 using a semi-analytical approach taking into account the temperature and optical depth gradients. Using this model, we simultaneously reproduce the level and the minima of the correlated fluxes and constrain the gap size of the disk for each observation. The values obtained for the projected gap size in different orientations are consistent with the separation found by the geometrical model., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal. 10 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Infrared Interferometry and AGNs: Parsec-scale Disks and Dusty Outflows
- Author
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Burtscher, Leonard, Hönig, Sebastian, Jaffe, Walter, Kishimoto, Makoto, Lopez-Gonzaga, Noel, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Burtscher, Leonard, Hönig, Sebastian, Jaffe, Walter, Kishimoto, Makoto, Lopez-Gonzaga, Noel, Meisenheimer, Klaus, and Tristram, Konrad R. W.
- Abstract
The "torus" is the central element of the most popular theory unifying various classes of AGNs, but it is usually described as "putative" because it has not been imaged yet. Since it is too small to be resolved with single-dish telescopes, one can only make indirect assumptions about its structure using models. Using infrared interferometry, however, we were able to resolve the circum-nuclear dust distributions for several nearby AGNs and achieved constraints on some further two dozen sources. We discovered circum-nuclear dust on parsec scales in all sources and, in two nearby sources, were able to dissect this dust into two distinct components. The compact component, a very thin disk, appears to be connected to the maser disk and the extended one, which is responsible for most of the mid-IR flux, is oriented perpendicularly to the circum-nuclear gas disks. What may come as a surprise when having in mind the standard unification cartoon actually connects well to observations on larger scales. Optically thin dust in the polar region, perhaps driven by a disk wind, could solve both the scale height problem of the torus and explain the missing anisotropy in the mid-IR - X-ray relation., Comment: 9 pages (+ references), 5 figures, review paper for SPIE astronomical instrumentation 2016
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
12. Infrared Interferometry and AGNs: Parsec-scale Disks and Dusty Outflows
- Author
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Burtscher, Leonard, Hönig, Sebastian, Jaffe, Walter, Kishimoto, Makoto, Lopez-Gonzaga, Noel, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Burtscher, Leonard, Hönig, Sebastian, Jaffe, Walter, Kishimoto, Makoto, Lopez-Gonzaga, Noel, Meisenheimer, Klaus, and Tristram, Konrad R. W.
- Abstract
The "torus" is the central element of the most popular theory unifying various classes of AGNs, but it is usually described as "putative" because it has not been imaged yet. Since it is too small to be resolved with single-dish telescopes, one can only make indirect assumptions about its structure using models. Using infrared interferometry, however, we were able to resolve the circum-nuclear dust distributions for several nearby AGNs and achieved constraints on some further two dozen sources. We discovered circum-nuclear dust on parsec scales in all sources and, in two nearby sources, were able to dissect this dust into two distinct components. The compact component, a very thin disk, appears to be connected to the maser disk and the extended one, which is responsible for most of the mid-IR flux, is oriented perpendicularly to the circum-nuclear gas disks. What may come as a surprise when having in mind the standard unification cartoon actually connects well to observations on larger scales. Optically thin dust in the polar region, perhaps driven by a disk wind, could solve both the scale height problem of the torus and explain the missing anisotropy in the mid-IR - X-ray relation., Comment: 9 pages (+ references), 5 figures, review paper for SPIE astronomical instrumentation 2016
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The dusty torus in the Circinus galaxy:The dusty torus in the Circinus galaxy
- Author
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Tristram, Konrad R. W., Burtscher, Leonard, Jaffe, Walter, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Hönig, Sebastian Florian, Kishimoto, Makoto, Schartmann, Marc, Weigelt, Gerd, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Burtscher, Leonard, Jaffe, Walter, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Hönig, Sebastian Florian, Kishimoto, Makoto, Schartmann, Marc, and Weigelt, Gerd
- Published
- 2014
14. The dusty torus in the Circinus galaxy:The dusty torus in the Circinus galaxy
- Author
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Tristram, Konrad R. W., Burtscher, Leonard, Jaffe, Walter, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Hönig, Sebastian Florian, Kishimoto, Makoto, Schartmann, Marc, Weigelt, Gerd, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Burtscher, Leonard, Jaffe, Walter, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Hönig, Sebastian Florian, Kishimoto, Makoto, Schartmann, Marc, and Weigelt, Gerd
- Published
- 2014
15. A diversity of dusty AGN tori: Data release for the VLTI/MIDI AGN Large Program and first results for 23 galaxies
- Author
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Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Jaffe, Walter, Hönig, Sebastian F., Davies, Richard I., Kishimoto, Makoto, Pott, Jörg-Uwe, Röttgering, Huub, Schartmann, Marc, Weigelt, Gerd, Wolf, Sebastian, Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Jaffe, Walter, Hönig, Sebastian F., Davies, Richard I., Kishimoto, Makoto, Pott, Jörg-Uwe, Röttgering, Huub, Schartmann, Marc, Weigelt, Gerd, and Wolf, Sebastian
- Abstract
The AGN-heated dust distribution (the "torus") is increasingly recognized not only as the absorber required in unifying models, but as a tracer for the reservoir that feeds the nuclear Super-Massive Black Hole. Yet, even its most basic structural properties (such as its extent, geometry and elongation) are unknown for all but a few archetypal objects. Since most AGNs are unresolved in the mid-infrared, we utilize the MID-infrared interferometric Instrument (MIDI) at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) that is sensitive to structures as small as a few milli-arcseconds (mas). We present here an extensive amount of new interferometric observations from the MIDI AGN Large Program (2009 - 2011) and add data from the archive to give a complete view of the existing MIDI observations of AGNs. Additionally, we have obtained high-quality mid-infrared spectra from VLT/VISIR. We present correlated and total flux spectra for 23 AGNs and derive flux and size estimates at 12 micron using simple axisymmetric geometrical models. Perhaps the most surprising result is the relatively high level of unresolved flux and its large scatter: The median "point source fraction" is 70 % for type 1 and 47 % for type 2 AGNs meaning that a large part of the flux is concentrated on scales smaller than about 5 mas (0.1 - 10 pc). Among sources observed with similar spatial resolution, it varies from 20 % - 100 %. For 18 of the sources, two nuclear components can be distinguished in the radial fits. While these models provide good fits to all but the brightest sources, significant elongations are detected in eight sources. The half-light radii of the fainter sources are smaller than expected from the size ~ L^0.5 scaling of the bright sources and show a large scatter, especially when compared to the relatively tight size--luminosity relation in the near-infrared., Comment: A&A in press; 93 pages, 63 figures, 39 tables; data available only via CDS
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A diversity of dusty AGN tori: Data release for the VLTI/MIDI AGN Large Program and first results for 23 galaxies
- Author
-
Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Jaffe, Walter, Hönig, Sebastian F., Davies, Richard I., Kishimoto, Makoto, Pott, Jörg-Uwe, Röttgering, Huub, Schartmann, Marc, Weigelt, Gerd, Wolf, Sebastian, Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Jaffe, Walter, Hönig, Sebastian F., Davies, Richard I., Kishimoto, Makoto, Pott, Jörg-Uwe, Röttgering, Huub, Schartmann, Marc, Weigelt, Gerd, and Wolf, Sebastian
- Abstract
The AGN-heated dust distribution (the "torus") is increasingly recognized not only as the absorber required in unifying models, but as a tracer for the reservoir that feeds the nuclear Super-Massive Black Hole. Yet, even its most basic structural properties (such as its extent, geometry and elongation) are unknown for all but a few archetypal objects. Since most AGNs are unresolved in the mid-infrared, we utilize the MID-infrared interferometric Instrument (MIDI) at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) that is sensitive to structures as small as a few milli-arcseconds (mas). We present here an extensive amount of new interferometric observations from the MIDI AGN Large Program (2009 - 2011) and add data from the archive to give a complete view of the existing MIDI observations of AGNs. Additionally, we have obtained high-quality mid-infrared spectra from VLT/VISIR. We present correlated and total flux spectra for 23 AGNs and derive flux and size estimates at 12 micron using simple axisymmetric geometrical models. Perhaps the most surprising result is the relatively high level of unresolved flux and its large scatter: The median "point source fraction" is 70 % for type 1 and 47 % for type 2 AGNs meaning that a large part of the flux is concentrated on scales smaller than about 5 mas (0.1 - 10 pc). Among sources observed with similar spatial resolution, it varies from 20 % - 100 %. For 18 of the sources, two nuclear components can be distinguished in the radial fits. While these models provide good fits to all but the brightest sources, significant elongations are detected in eight sources. The half-light radii of the fainter sources are smaller than expected from the size ~ L^0.5 scaling of the bright sources and show a large scatter, especially when compared to the relatively tight size--luminosity relation in the near-infrared., Comment: A&A in press; 93 pages, 63 figures, 39 tables; data available only via CDS
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Observing faint targets with MIDI at the VLTI -- The MIDI AGN Large Programme experience
- Author
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Burtscher, Leonard, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Jaffe, Walter J., Meisenheimer, Klaus, Burtscher, Leonard, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Jaffe, Walter J., and Meisenheimer, Klaus
- Abstract
In order to put MIDI/VLTI observations of AGNs on a significant statistical basis, the number of objects had to be increased dramatically from the few prominent bright cases to over 20. For this, correlated fluxes as faint as ~ 150 mJy need to be observed, calibrated and their errors be estimated reliably. We have developed new data reduction methods for the coherent estimation of correlated fluxes with the Expert Work Station (EWS). They increase the signal/noise of the reduced correlated fluxes by decreasing the jitter in the group delay estimation. While correlation losses cannot be fully avoided for the weakest objects even with the improved routines, we have developed a method to simulate observations of weak targets and can now detect --- and correct for --- such losses. We have analyzed all sources of error that are relevant for the observations of weak targets. Apart from the photon-noise error, that is usually quoted, there is an additional error from the uncertainty in the calibration (i.e. the conversion factor). With the improved data reduction, calibration and error estimation, we can consistently and reproducibly observe fluxes as weak as ~ 150 mJy with an uncertainty of ~ 15 % under average conditions., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures; to appear in SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation, SPIE Conference Series 8445
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Observing faint targets with MIDI at the VLTI -- The MIDI AGN Large Programme experience
- Author
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Burtscher, Leonard, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Jaffe, Walter J., Meisenheimer, Klaus, Burtscher, Leonard, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Jaffe, Walter J., and Meisenheimer, Klaus
- Abstract
In order to put MIDI/VLTI observations of AGNs on a significant statistical basis, the number of objects had to be increased dramatically from the few prominent bright cases to over 20. For this, correlated fluxes as faint as ~ 150 mJy need to be observed, calibrated and their errors be estimated reliably. We have developed new data reduction methods for the coherent estimation of correlated fluxes with the Expert Work Station (EWS). They increase the signal/noise of the reduced correlated fluxes by decreasing the jitter in the group delay estimation. While correlation losses cannot be fully avoided for the weakest objects even with the improved routines, we have developed a method to simulate observations of weak targets and can now detect --- and correct for --- such losses. We have analyzed all sources of error that are relevant for the observations of weak targets. Apart from the photon-noise error, that is usually quoted, there is an additional error from the uncertainty in the calibration (i.e. the conversion factor). With the improved data reduction, calibration and error estimation, we can consistently and reproducibly observe fluxes as weak as ~ 150 mJy with an uncertainty of ~ 15 % under average conditions., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures; to appear in SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation, SPIE Conference Series 8445
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Resolving the nucleus of Centaurus A at mid-IR wavelengths
- Author
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Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Jaffe, Walter, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Röttgering, Huub J. A., Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Jaffe, Walter, Tristram, Konrad R. W., and Röttgering, Huub J. A.
- Abstract
We have observed Centaurus A with the MID-infrared Interferometric instrument (MIDI) at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) at resolutions of 7 - 15 mas (at 12.5 micron) and filled gaps in the (u,v) coverage in comparison to earlier measurements. We are now able to describe the nuclear emission in terms of geometric components and derive their parameters by fitting models to the interferometric data. With simple geometrical models, the best fit is achieved for an elongated disk with flat intensity profile with diameter 76 +/- 9 mas x 35 +/- 2 mas (1.41 +/- 0.17 pc x 0.65 +/- 0.03 pc) whose major axis is oriented at a position angle (PA) of 10.1 +/- 2.2 degrees east of north. A point source contributes 47 +/- 11 % of the nuclear emission at 12.5 micron. There is also evidence that neither such a uniform nor a Gaussian disk are good fits to the data. This indicates that we are resolving more complicated small-scale structure in AGNs with MIDI, as has been seen in Seyfert galaxies previously observed with MIDI. The PA and inferred inclination i = 62.6 +2.1/-2.6 degrees of the dust emission are compared with observations of gas and dust at larger scales., Comment: Accepted for the PASA special issue on Centaurus A
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Resolving the nucleus of Centaurus A at mid-IR wavelengths
- Author
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Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Jaffe, Walter, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Röttgering, Huub J. A., Burtscher, Leonard, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Jaffe, Walter, Tristram, Konrad R. W., and Röttgering, Huub J. A.
- Abstract
We have observed Centaurus A with the MID-infrared Interferometric instrument (MIDI) at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) at resolutions of 7 - 15 mas (at 12.5 micron) and filled gaps in the (u,v) coverage in comparison to earlier measurements. We are now able to describe the nuclear emission in terms of geometric components and derive their parameters by fitting models to the interferometric data. With simple geometrical models, the best fit is achieved for an elongated disk with flat intensity profile with diameter 76 +/- 9 mas x 35 +/- 2 mas (1.41 +/- 0.17 pc x 0.65 +/- 0.03 pc) whose major axis is oriented at a position angle (PA) of 10.1 +/- 2.2 degrees east of north. A point source contributes 47 +/- 11 % of the nuclear emission at 12.5 micron. There is also evidence that neither such a uniform nor a Gaussian disk are good fits to the data. This indicates that we are resolving more complicated small-scale structure in AGNs with MIDI, as has been seen in Seyfert galaxies previously observed with MIDI. The PA and inferred inclination i = 62.6 +2.1/-2.6 degrees of the dust emission are compared with observations of gas and dust at larger scales., Comment: Accepted for the PASA special issue on Centaurus A
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Dust emission from a parsec-scale structure in the Seyfert 1 nucleus of NGC 4151
- Author
-
Burtscher, Leonard, Jaffe, Walter, Raban, David, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Röttgering, Huub, Burtscher, Leonard, Jaffe, Walter, Raban, David, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., and Röttgering, Huub
- Abstract
We report mid-IR interferometric measurements with \sim 10 mas resolution, which resolve the warm (T = 285 +25 / -50 K) thermal emission at the center of NGC 4151. Using pairs of VLT 8.2 m telescopes with MIDI and by comparing the data to a Gaussian model, we determined the diameter of the dust emission region, albeit only along one position angle, to be 2.0 +/- 0.4 pc (FWHM). This is the first size and temperature estimate for the nuclear warm dust distribution in a Seyfert 1 galaxy. The parameters found are comparable to those in Seyfert 2 galaxies, thus providing direct support for the unified model. Using simple analytic temperature distributions, we find that the mid-infrared emission is probably not the smooth continuation of the hot nuclear source that is marginally resolved with K band interferometry. We also detected weak excess emission around 10.5 micron in our shorter baseline observation, possibly indicating that silicate emission is extended to the parsec scale., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Parsec-scale dust distributions in Seyfert galaxies - Results of the MIDI AGN snapshot survey
- Author
-
Tristram, Konrad R. W., Raban, David, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Jaffe, Walter, Röttgering, Huub, Burtscher, Leonard, Cotton, William D., Graser, Uwe, Henning, Thomas, Leinert, Christoph, Lopez, Bruno, Morel, Sébastien, Perrin, Guy, Wittkowski, Markus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Raban, David, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Jaffe, Walter, Röttgering, Huub, Burtscher, Leonard, Cotton, William D., Graser, Uwe, Henning, Thomas, Leinert, Christoph, Lopez, Bruno, Morel, Sébastien, Perrin, Guy, and Wittkowski, Markus
- Abstract
The emission of warm dust dominates the mid-infrared spectra of active galactic nuclei (AGN). Only interferometric observations provide the necessary angular resolution to resolve the nuclear dust and to study its distribution and properties. The investigation of dust in AGN cores is hence one of the main science goals for the MID-infrared Interferometric instrument MIDI at the VLTI. As the first step, the feasibility of AGN observations was verified and the most promising sources for detailed studies were identified. This was carried out in a "snapshot survey" with MIDI using Guaranteed Time Observations. In the survey, observations were attempted for 13 of the brightest AGN in the mid-infrared which are visible from Paranal. The results of the three brightest, best studied sources have been published in separate papers. Here we present the interferometric observations for the remaining 10, fainter AGN. For 8 of these, interferometric measurements could be carried out. Size estimates or limits on the spatial extent of the AGN-heated dust were derived from the interferometric data of 7 AGN. These indicate that the dust distributions are compact, with sizes on the order of a few parsec. The derived sizes roughly scale with the square root of the luminosity in the mid-infrared, s ~ sqrt(L), with no clear distinction between type 1 and type 2 objects. This is in agreement with a model of nearly optically thick dust structures heated to T ~ 300 K. For three sources, the 10 micron feature due to silicates is tentatively detected either in emission or in absorption. Based on the results for all AGN studied with MIDI so far, we conclude that in the mid-infrared the differences between individual galactic nuclei are greater than the generic differences between type 1 and type 2 objects., Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, updated to version published in A&A 502, 67-84
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Resolving the obscuring torus in NGC 1068 with the power of infrared interferometry: Revealing the inner funnel of dust
- Author
-
Raban, David, Jaffe, Walter, Röttgering, Huub, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Raban, David, Jaffe, Walter, Röttgering, Huub, Meisenheimer, Klaus, and Tristram, Konrad R. W.
- Abstract
We present new interferometric data obtained with MIDI (MID infrared Interferometric instrument) for the Seyfert II galaxy NGC 1068, with an extensive coverage of sixteen uv points. These observations resolve the nuclear mid-infrared emission from NGC 1068 in unprecedented detail with a maximum resolution of 7 mas. For the first time, sufficient uv points have been obtained, allowing us to generate an image of the source using maximum entropy image reconstruction. The features of the image are similar to those obtained by modelling. We find that the mid-infrared emission can be represented by two components, each with a Gaussian brightness distribution. The first, identified as the inner funnel of the obscuring torus, is hot (800K), 1.35 parsec long, and 0.45 parsec thick in FWHM at a PA=-42 degrees (from north to east). It has an absorption profile different than standard interstellar dust and with evidence for clumpiness. The second component is 3 by 4 pc in FWHM with T=300K, and we identify it with the cooler body of the torus. The compact component is tilted by 45 degrees with respect to the radio jet and has similar size and orientation to the observed water maser distribution. We show how the dust distribution relates to other observables within a few parsecs of the core of the galaxy such as the nuclear masers, the radio jet, and the ionization cone. We compare our findings to a similar study of the Circinus galaxy and other relevant studies. Our findings shed new light on the relation between the different parsec-scale components in NGC 1068 and the obscuring torus., Comment: Accepted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Dust emission from a parsec-scale structure in the Seyfert 1 nucleus of NGC 4151
- Author
-
Burtscher, Leonard, Jaffe, Walter, Raban, David, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Röttgering, Huub, Burtscher, Leonard, Jaffe, Walter, Raban, David, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., and Röttgering, Huub
- Abstract
We report mid-IR interferometric measurements with \sim 10 mas resolution, which resolve the warm (T = 285 +25 / -50 K) thermal emission at the center of NGC 4151. Using pairs of VLT 8.2 m telescopes with MIDI and by comparing the data to a Gaussian model, we determined the diameter of the dust emission region, albeit only along one position angle, to be 2.0 +/- 0.4 pc (FWHM). This is the first size and temperature estimate for the nuclear warm dust distribution in a Seyfert 1 galaxy. The parameters found are comparable to those in Seyfert 2 galaxies, thus providing direct support for the unified model. Using simple analytic temperature distributions, we find that the mid-infrared emission is probably not the smooth continuation of the hot nuclear source that is marginally resolved with K band interferometry. We also detected weak excess emission around 10.5 micron in our shorter baseline observation, possibly indicating that silicate emission is extended to the parsec scale., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Parsec-scale dust distributions in Seyfert galaxies - Results of the MIDI AGN snapshot survey
- Author
-
Tristram, Konrad R. W., Raban, David, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Jaffe, Walter, Röttgering, Huub, Burtscher, Leonard, Cotton, William D., Graser, Uwe, Henning, Thomas, Leinert, Christoph, Lopez, Bruno, Morel, Sébastien, Perrin, Guy, Wittkowski, Markus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Raban, David, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Jaffe, Walter, Röttgering, Huub, Burtscher, Leonard, Cotton, William D., Graser, Uwe, Henning, Thomas, Leinert, Christoph, Lopez, Bruno, Morel, Sébastien, Perrin, Guy, and Wittkowski, Markus
- Abstract
The emission of warm dust dominates the mid-infrared spectra of active galactic nuclei (AGN). Only interferometric observations provide the necessary angular resolution to resolve the nuclear dust and to study its distribution and properties. The investigation of dust in AGN cores is hence one of the main science goals for the MID-infrared Interferometric instrument MIDI at the VLTI. As the first step, the feasibility of AGN observations was verified and the most promising sources for detailed studies were identified. This was carried out in a "snapshot survey" with MIDI using Guaranteed Time Observations. In the survey, observations were attempted for 13 of the brightest AGN in the mid-infrared which are visible from Paranal. The results of the three brightest, best studied sources have been published in separate papers. Here we present the interferometric observations for the remaining 10, fainter AGN. For 8 of these, interferometric measurements could be carried out. Size estimates or limits on the spatial extent of the AGN-heated dust were derived from the interferometric data of 7 AGN. These indicate that the dust distributions are compact, with sizes on the order of a few parsec. The derived sizes roughly scale with the square root of the luminosity in the mid-infrared, s ~ sqrt(L), with no clear distinction between type 1 and type 2 objects. This is in agreement with a model of nearly optically thick dust structures heated to T ~ 300 K. For three sources, the 10 micron feature due to silicates is tentatively detected either in emission or in absorption. Based on the results for all AGN studied with MIDI so far, we conclude that in the mid-infrared the differences between individual galactic nuclei are greater than the generic differences between type 1 and type 2 objects., Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, updated to version published in A&A 502, 67-84
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Resolving the obscuring torus in NGC 1068 with the power of infrared interferometry: Revealing the inner funnel of dust
- Author
-
Raban, David, Jaffe, Walter, Röttgering, Huub, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Tristram, Konrad R. W., Raban, David, Jaffe, Walter, Röttgering, Huub, Meisenheimer, Klaus, and Tristram, Konrad R. W.
- Abstract
We present new interferometric data obtained with MIDI (MID infrared Interferometric instrument) for the Seyfert II galaxy NGC 1068, with an extensive coverage of sixteen uv points. These observations resolve the nuclear mid-infrared emission from NGC 1068 in unprecedented detail with a maximum resolution of 7 mas. For the first time, sufficient uv points have been obtained, allowing us to generate an image of the source using maximum entropy image reconstruction. The features of the image are similar to those obtained by modelling. We find that the mid-infrared emission can be represented by two components, each with a Gaussian brightness distribution. The first, identified as the inner funnel of the obscuring torus, is hot (800K), 1.35 parsec long, and 0.45 parsec thick in FWHM at a PA=-42 degrees (from north to east). It has an absorption profile different than standard interstellar dust and with evidence for clumpiness. The second component is 3 by 4 pc in FWHM with T=300K, and we identify it with the cooler body of the torus. The compact component is tilted by 45 degrees with respect to the radio jet and has similar size and orientation to the observed water maser distribution. We show how the dust distribution relates to other observables within a few parsecs of the core of the galaxy such as the nuclear masers, the radio jet, and the ionization cone. We compare our findings to a similar study of the Circinus galaxy and other relevant studies. Our findings shed new light on the relation between the different parsec-scale components in NGC 1068 and the obscuring torus., Comment: Accepted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Observing the Seyfert 2 nucleus of NGC 1068 with the VLT Interferometer
- Author
-
Rottgering, Huub, Jaffe, Walter, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Sol, Helen, Leinert, Christoph, Richichi, Andrea, Wittkowski, Markus, Rottgering, Huub, Jaffe, Walter, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Sol, Helen, Leinert, Christoph, Richichi, Andrea, and Wittkowski, Markus
- Abstract
Dusty tori have been suggested to play a crucial role in determining the physical characteristics of active galactic nuclei (AGN), but investigation of their properties has stalled for lack of high resolution mid-IR imaging. Recently, a long-awaited breakthrough in this field was achieved: NGC 1068, a nearby AGN, was the first extragalactic object to be observed with a mid-IR interferometer, thereby obtaining the needed angular resolution to study the alleged torus. In this proceeding, first the field of AGN research is briefly reviewed, with an emphasis on models of dusty tori. Second, the general properties of the key object NGC 1068 are discussed. Third, the MIDI mid-IR interferometric data set is presented together with a first attempt to interpret this data in the context of tori models. Fourth, preliminary MIDI interferometric spectra of the nucleus of the nearby starbursting galaxy Circinus are presented. Finally, we briefly discuss the prospects of ESA's Darwin mission for observing nearby and distant AGN. This mission will allow detailed mapping of tori of low luminosity AGN such as NGC 1068 up to redshifts of 1 - 2 and more luminous AGN up to redshift of 10 and beyond (abridged)., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, published in Proceedings of SPIE Volume 5491 "New Frontiers in Stellar Interferometry"
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Observing the Seyfert 2 nucleus of NGC 1068 with the VLT Interferometer
- Author
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Rottgering, Huub, Jaffe, Walter, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Sol, Helen, Leinert, Christoph, Richichi, Andrea, Wittkowski, Markus, Rottgering, Huub, Jaffe, Walter, Meisenheimer, Klaus, Sol, Helen, Leinert, Christoph, Richichi, Andrea, and Wittkowski, Markus
- Abstract
Dusty tori have been suggested to play a crucial role in determining the physical characteristics of active galactic nuclei (AGN), but investigation of their properties has stalled for lack of high resolution mid-IR imaging. Recently, a long-awaited breakthrough in this field was achieved: NGC 1068, a nearby AGN, was the first extragalactic object to be observed with a mid-IR interferometer, thereby obtaining the needed angular resolution to study the alleged torus. In this proceeding, first the field of AGN research is briefly reviewed, with an emphasis on models of dusty tori. Second, the general properties of the key object NGC 1068 are discussed. Third, the MIDI mid-IR interferometric data set is presented together with a first attempt to interpret this data in the context of tori models. Fourth, preliminary MIDI interferometric spectra of the nucleus of the nearby starbursting galaxy Circinus are presented. Finally, we briefly discuss the prospects of ESA's Darwin mission for observing nearby and distant AGN. This mission will allow detailed mapping of tori of low luminosity AGN such as NGC 1068 up to redshifts of 1 - 2 and more luminous AGN up to redshift of 10 and beyond (abridged)., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, published in Proceedings of SPIE Volume 5491 "New Frontiers in Stellar Interferometry"
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. HST observations of nuclear stellar disks
- Author
-
Krajnovic, Davor, Jaffe, Walter, Krajnovic, Davor, and Jaffe, Walter
- Abstract
We present observations of four nearby early-type galaxies with previously known nuclear stellar disks using two instruments on-board the Hubble Space Telescope. We observed NGC4128, NGC4612, and NGC5308 with the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2, and the same three galaxies, plus NGC4570, with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. We have detected a red nucleus in NGC4128, a blue nucleus in NGC4621, and a blue disk in NGC5308. Additionally, we have discovered a blue disk-like feature with position angle ~15 degrees from the major axis in NGC4621. In NGC5308 there is evidence for a blue region along the minor axis. We discovered a blue transient on the images of NGC4128 at position 0.14" west and 0.32" north from the nucleus. The extracted kinematic profiles belong to two groups: fast (NGC4570 and NGC5308) and kinematically disturbed rotators (NGC4128 and NGC4621). We report the discovery of a kinematically decoupled core in NGC4128. Galaxies have mostly old (10-14 Gyr) stellar populations with large spread in metallicities (sub- to super-solar). We discuss the possible formation scenarios, including bar-driven secular evolution and the influence of mergers, which can explain the observed color and kinematic features., Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, A&A in press
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. HST observations of nuclear stellar disks
- Author
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Krajnovic, Davor, Jaffe, Walter, Krajnovic, Davor, and Jaffe, Walter
- Abstract
We present observations of four nearby early-type galaxies with previously known nuclear stellar disks using two instruments on-board the Hubble Space Telescope. We observed NGC4128, NGC4612, and NGC5308 with the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2, and the same three galaxies, plus NGC4570, with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. We have detected a red nucleus in NGC4128, a blue nucleus in NGC4621, and a blue disk in NGC5308. Additionally, we have discovered a blue disk-like feature with position angle ~15 degrees from the major axis in NGC4621. In NGC5308 there is evidence for a blue region along the minor axis. We discovered a blue transient on the images of NGC4128 at position 0.14" west and 0.32" north from the nucleus. The extracted kinematic profiles belong to two groups: fast (NGC4570 and NGC5308) and kinematically disturbed rotators (NGC4128 and NGC4621). We report the discovery of a kinematically decoupled core in NGC4128. Galaxies have mostly old (10-14 Gyr) stellar populations with large spread in metallicities (sub- to super-solar). We discuss the possible formation scenarios, including bar-driven secular evolution and the influence of mergers, which can explain the observed color and kinematic features., Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, A&A in press
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Relation between dust and radio luminosity in optically selected early type galaxies
- Author
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Krajnovic, Davor, Jaffe, Walter, Krajnovic, Davor, and Jaffe, Walter
- Abstract
We have surveyed an optical/IR selected sample of nearby E/S0 galaxies with and without nuclear dust structures with the VLA at 3.6 cm to a sensitivity of 100 $\mu$Jy. We can construct a Radio Luminosity Function (RLF) of these galaxies to ~10^19 W/Hz and find that ~50% of these galaxies have AGNs at this level. The space density of these AGNs equals that of starburst galaxies at this luminosity. Several dust-free galaxies have low luminosity radio cores, and their RLF is not significantly less than that of the dusty galaxies., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Relation between dust and radio luminosity in optically selected early type galaxies
- Author
-
Krajnovic, Davor, Jaffe, Walter, Krajnovic, Davor, and Jaffe, Walter
- Abstract
We have surveyed an optical/IR selected sample of nearby E/S0 galaxies with and without nuclear dust structures with the VLA at 3.6 cm to a sensitivity of 100 $\mu$Jy. We can construct a Radio Luminosity Function (RLF) of these galaxies to ~10^19 W/Hz and find that ~50% of these galaxies have AGNs at this level. The space density of these AGNs equals that of starburst galaxies at this luminosity. Several dust-free galaxies have low luminosity radio cores, and their RLF is not significantly less than that of the dusty galaxies., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. WFPC2 Images of the Central Regions of Early-Type Galaxies - I. The Data
- Author
-
Rest, Armin, Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, Tran, Hien, Tsvetanov, Zlatan, Ford, Holland C., Davies, James, Schafer, Joanna, Rest, Armin, Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, Tran, Hien, Tsvetanov, Zlatan, Ford, Holland C., Davies, James, and Schafer, Joanna
- Abstract
We present high resolution R-band images of the central regions of 67 early-type galaxies obtained with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) aboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Our sample strikingly confirms the complex morphologies of the central regions of early-type galaxies. In particular, we detect dust in 43 percent of all galaxies, and evidence for embedded stellar disks in a remarkably large fraction of 51 percent. In 14 of those galaxies the disk-like structures are misaligned with the main galaxy, suggesting that they correspond to stellar bars in S0 galaxies. We analyze the luminosity profiles of the galaxies in our sample, and classify galaxies according to their central cusp slope. To a large extent we confirm the clear dichotomy found in previous HST surveys: bright, boxy ellipticals with shallow inner cusps (`core' galaxies) on one hand and faint, disky ellipticals with steep central cusps (`power-law' galaxies) on the other hand. The advantages and shortcomings of classification schemes utilizing the extrapolated central cusp slope are discussed, and it is shown that this cusp slope might be an inadequate representation for galaxies whose luminosity profile slope changes smoothly with radius rather than resembling a broken power-law. In fact, we find evidence for an `intermediate' class of galaxies, that cannot unambiguously be classified as either core or power-law galaxies, and which have central cusp slopes and absolute magnitudes intermediate between those of core and power-law galaxies., Comment: 44 pages, 7 Postscript figures. Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. The associated Appendix with figures of luminosity profiles, contour plots and isophotal parameters for all galaxies is available at http://www.astro.washington.edu/rest/centralprop
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. WFPC2 Images of the Central Regions of Early-Type Galaxies - I. The Data
- Author
-
Rest, Armin, Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, Tran, Hien, Tsvetanov, Zlatan, Ford, Holland C., Davies, James, Schafer, Joanna, Rest, Armin, Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, Tran, Hien, Tsvetanov, Zlatan, Ford, Holland C., Davies, James, and Schafer, Joanna
- Abstract
We present high resolution R-band images of the central regions of 67 early-type galaxies obtained with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) aboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Our sample strikingly confirms the complex morphologies of the central regions of early-type galaxies. In particular, we detect dust in 43 percent of all galaxies, and evidence for embedded stellar disks in a remarkably large fraction of 51 percent. In 14 of those galaxies the disk-like structures are misaligned with the main galaxy, suggesting that they correspond to stellar bars in S0 galaxies. We analyze the luminosity profiles of the galaxies in our sample, and classify galaxies according to their central cusp slope. To a large extent we confirm the clear dichotomy found in previous HST surveys: bright, boxy ellipticals with shallow inner cusps (`core' galaxies) on one hand and faint, disky ellipticals with steep central cusps (`power-law' galaxies) on the other hand. The advantages and shortcomings of classification schemes utilizing the extrapolated central cusp slope are discussed, and it is shown that this cusp slope might be an inadequate representation for galaxies whose luminosity profile slope changes smoothly with radius rather than resembling a broken power-law. In fact, we find evidence for an `intermediate' class of galaxies, that cannot unambiguously be classified as either core or power-law galaxies, and which have central cusp slopes and absolute magnitudes intermediate between those of core and power-law galaxies., Comment: 44 pages, 7 Postscript figures. Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. The associated Appendix with figures of luminosity profiles, contour plots and isophotal parameters for all galaxies is available at http://www.astro.washington.edu/rest/centralprop
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Nuclear stellar discs in early-type galaxies -- I. HST and WHT observations
- Author
-
Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, van der Marel, Roeland P., Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, and van der Marel, Roeland P.
- Abstract
We present multi-colour (U, V and I) photometry obtained with the second Wide Field and Planetary Camera (WFPC2) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and spectra taken with the William Herschel Telescope (WHT) and the HST Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS), for the early-type galaxies NGC 4342 and NGC 4570. These galaxies are intermediate between ellipticals and lenticulars, and they both have a small nuclear stellar disc in addition to their main outer disc. Colour images reveal no colour differences between the nuclear discs and the bulges. Comparison of the U-V and V-I colours with stellar population models indicates that the central regions of both galaxies are of intermediate age (approx. 8 Gyr) and of high metallicity. The long-slit WHT spectra and the FOS spectra (of four times higher spatial resolution) reveal that both galaxies are rapidly rotating, and they both have velocity dispersions that increase strongly towards the centre. The FOS spectra of NGC 4342 indicate a central velocity dispersion of 420 km/s, higher than the 320 km/s measured from the WHT spectra. Also, the nuclear rotation gradient measured with the FOS is steeper than that measured with the WHT; it reaches V = 200 km/s at 0.25''. The rapid stellar motions seen in the centre of NGC 4342 suggest a large central mass concentration, possibly a massive black hole. The kinematics of the more massive NGC 4570 are less spectacular, with a central velocity dispersion of 250 km/s and a central rotation curve that reaches only 60 km/s at 0.25''., Comment: 23 pages, TeX, including 16 figures and 12 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Nuclear stellar discs in early-type galaxies -- I. HST and WHT observations
- Author
-
Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, van der Marel, Roeland P., Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, and van der Marel, Roeland P.
- Abstract
We present multi-colour (U, V and I) photometry obtained with the second Wide Field and Planetary Camera (WFPC2) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and spectra taken with the William Herschel Telescope (WHT) and the HST Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS), for the early-type galaxies NGC 4342 and NGC 4570. These galaxies are intermediate between ellipticals and lenticulars, and they both have a small nuclear stellar disc in addition to their main outer disc. Colour images reveal no colour differences between the nuclear discs and the bulges. Comparison of the U-V and V-I colours with stellar population models indicates that the central regions of both galaxies are of intermediate age (approx. 8 Gyr) and of high metallicity. The long-slit WHT spectra and the FOS spectra (of four times higher spatial resolution) reveal that both galaxies are rapidly rotating, and they both have velocity dispersions that increase strongly towards the centre. The FOS spectra of NGC 4342 indicate a central velocity dispersion of 420 km/s, higher than the 320 km/s measured from the WHT spectra. Also, the nuclear rotation gradient measured with the FOS is steeper than that measured with the WHT; it reaches V = 200 km/s at 0.25''. The rapid stellar motions seen in the centre of NGC 4342 suggest a large central mass concentration, possibly a massive black hole. The kinematics of the more massive NGC 4570 are less spectacular, with a central velocity dispersion of 250 km/s and a central rotation curve that reaches only 60 km/s at 0.25''., Comment: 23 pages, TeX, including 16 figures and 12 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A Nuclear Disk and massive BH in NGC 4342
- Author
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Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, Bosch, Frank C. van den, and Jaffe, Walter
- Abstract
We discuss photometric and spectroscopic data of the E/S0 galaxy NGC 4342, obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). This galaxy harbors, in addition to its outer disk, a very small, stellar disk in its nucleus. Jeans-modeling suggests the presence of a 3-6$\times 10^8 \Msun$ black hole (BH) in the nucleus. This galaxy therefore deviates significantly from the correlation between BH mass and bulge mass, found for other BH candidate galaxies., Comment: 4 pages, Tex, 3 ps figures included. To appear in the conference proceedings of the Second Stromlo Symposium: The Nature of Elliptical Galaxies
- Published
- 1996
38. A Nuclear Disk and massive BH in NGC 4342
- Author
-
Bosch, Frank C. van den, Jaffe, Walter, Bosch, Frank C. van den, and Jaffe, Walter
- Abstract
We discuss photometric and spectroscopic data of the E/S0 galaxy NGC 4342, obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). This galaxy harbors, in addition to its outer disk, a very small, stellar disk in its nucleus. Jeans-modeling suggests the presence of a 3-6$\times 10^8 \Msun$ black hole (BH) in the nucleus. This galaxy therefore deviates significantly from the correlation between BH mass and bulge mass, found for other BH candidate galaxies., Comment: 4 pages, Tex, 3 ps figures included. To appear in the conference proceedings of the Second Stromlo Symposium: The Nature of Elliptical Galaxies
- Published
- 1996
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