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A Compact Jet at the Infrared Heart of the Prototypical Low-Luminosity AGN in NGC 1052

Authors :
J. A. Acosta-Pulido
Konrad R. W. Tristram
Daniel Asmus
Mercedes Prieto
N. López-Gonzaga
Enrique Lopez-Rodriguez
J. A. Fernández-Ontiveros
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
arXiv, 2019.

Abstract

The feeble radiative efficiency characteristic of Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei (LLAGN) is ascribed to a sub-Eddington accretion rate, typically at $\log(L_{\rm bol}/L_{\rm edd}) \lesssim -3$. At the finest angular resolutions that are attainable nowadays using mid-infrared (mid-IR) interferometry, the prototypical LLAGN in NGC 1052 remains unresolved down to $< 5\, \rm{mas}$ ($0.5\, \rm{pc}$). This is in line with non-thermal emission from a compact jet, a scenario further supported by a number of evidences: the broken power-law shape of the continuum distribution in the radio-to-UV range; the $\sim 4\%$ degree of polarisation measured in the nuclear mid-IR continuum, together with the mild optical extinction ($A_V \sim 1\, \rm{mag}$); and the "harder when brighter" behaviour of the X-ray spectrum, indicative of self-Compton synchrotron radiation. A remarkable feature is the steepness of the IR-to-UV core continuum, characterised by a power-law index of $\sim 2.6$, as compared to the canonical value of $0.7$. Alternatively, to explain the interferometric data by thermal emission would require an exceptionally compact dust distribution when compared to those observed in nearby AGN, with $A_V \gtrsim 2.8\, \rm{mag}$ to account for the IR polarisation. This is in contrast with several observational evidences against a high extinction along the line of sight, including the detection of the nucleus in the UV range and the well defined shape of the power-law continuum. The case of NGC 1052 shows that compact jets can dominate the nuclear emission in LLAGN across the whole electromagnetic spectrum, a scenario that might be common among this class of active nuclei.<br />Accepted for publication by MNRAS

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....abb7e9d330ed32bdc0ec5f9b2f17e4ee
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1903.05108