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Thermal imaging of dust hiding the black hole in NGC 1068

Authors :
Gámez Rosas, Violeta
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, Stéphane
Weigelt, Gerd
Berio, Philippe
Allouche, Fatme
Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie
Cruzalèbes, 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
Hocdé, Vincent
Hogerheijde, Michiel
Hron, Josef
Impellizzeri, Caterina M. V.
Klarmann, Lucia
Kokoulina, Elena
Labadie, Lucas
Lehmitz, Michael
Matter, Alexis
Paladini, Claudia
Pantin, Eric
Pott, Jörg-Uwe
Schertl, Dieter
Soulain, Anthony
Stee, Philippe
Tristram, Konrad
Varga, Jozsef
Woillez, Julien
Wolf, Sebastian
Yoffe, Gideon
Zins, Gerard
Source :
Nature; February 2022, Vol. 602 Issue: 7897 p403-407, 5p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

In the widely accepted ‘unified model’1solution 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 effects2and added dusty clumps and polar winds3but left the basic picture intact. However, recent high-resolution images4of the archetypal type-2 galaxy NGC 10685,6, 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 the type-2 classification. These images quickly generated reinterpretations of the dichotomy between types 1 and 27,8. 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.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
602
Issue :
7897
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs58949926
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04311-7