2006A&A...453...27C


Query : 2006A&A...453...27C

2006A&A...453...27C - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 453, 27-37 (2006/7-1)

The host galaxy/AGN connection in nearby early-type galaxies . A new view of the origin of the radio-quiet/radio-loud dichotomy?

CAPETTI A. and BALMAVERDE B.

Abstract (from CDS):

This is the third in a series of three papers exploring the connection between the multiwavelength properties of AGN in nearby early-type galaxies and the characteristics of their hosts. Starting from an initial sample of 332 galaxies, we selected 116 AGN candidates requiring the detection of a radio source with a flux limit of ∼1mJy, as measured from 5GHz VLA observations. In Capetti and Balmaverde (2005A&A...440...73C, Paper I) we classified the objects with available archival HST images into ``core'' and ``power-law'' galaxies, discriminating on the basis of the nuclear slope of their brightness profiles. We used HST and Chandra data to isolate the nuclear emission of these galaxies in the optical and X-ray bands, thus enabling us (once combined with the radio data) to study the multiwavelength behaviour of their nuclei. The properties of the nuclei hosted by the 29 core galaxies were presented in Balmaverde and Capetti (2006A&A...447...97B, Paper II). Core galaxies invariably host a radio-loud nucleus, with a median radio-loudness of Log R=3.6 and an X-ray based radio-loudness parameter of Log RX=-1.3. Here we discuss the properties of the nuclei of the 22 ``power-law'' galaxies. They show a substantial excess of optical and X-ray emission with respect to core galaxies at the same level of radio luminosity. Conversely, their radio-loudness parameters, Log R∼1.6 and Log RX~-3.3, are similar to those measured in Seyfert galaxies. Thus the radio-loudness of AGN hosted by early-type galaxies appears to be univocally related to the host's brightness profile: radio-loud AGN are only hosted by core galaxies, while radio-quiet AGN are found only in power-law galaxies. The brightness profile is determined by the galaxy's evolution, through its merger history; our results suggest that the same process sets the AGN flavour. In this scenario, the black holes hosted by the merging galaxies rapidly sink toward the centre of the newly formed object, setting its nuclear configuration, described by e.g. the total mass, spin, mass ratio, or separation of the SMBHs. These parameters are most likely at the origin of the different levels of the AGN radio-loudness. This connection might open a new path toward understanding the origin of the radio-loud/radio-quiet AGN dichotomy and provide us with a further tool for exploring the co-evolution of galaxies and supermassive black holes.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: active - galaxies: bulges - galaxies: nuclei - galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD - galaxies: structure

Simbad objects: 26

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

Number of rows : 26
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2023
#notes
1 [OKM2018] SWIFT J0315.0-1908 SyG 03 15 52.087 -19 06 44.26   17.48       ~ 50 1
2 NGC 1380 GiP 03 36 27.590 -34 58 34.68 11.32 10.94 9.93 9.37   ~ 417 1
3 NGC 2469 G 07 58 03.444 +56 40 49.63   13.2       ~ 36 0
4 NGC 3226 GiP 10 23 27.0064075320 +19 53 54.674937420   14.32 13.33     ~ 417 1
5 NGC 3245 GiP 10 27 18.3864983136 +28 30 26.621599932   11.6       ~ 339 0
6 NGC 3414 GiP 10 51 16.2099174408 +27 58 30.297624852   12.1       ~ 323 0
7 NGC 3516 Sy1 11 06 47.4632200800 +72 34 07.298374656   13.12 12.40     ~ 1521 0
8 NGC 3945 GiG 11 53 13.6081388304 +60 40 32.125024704   11.6       ~ 235 0
9 NGC 3998 SyG 11 57 56.1334044408 +55 27 12.922443432   11.64 12.10 10.09   ~ 631 2
10 NGC 4026 GiP 11 59 25.0914676128 +50 57 41.951225700   12.17       ~ 262 0
11 NGC 4036 LIN 12 01 26.7603659808 +61 53 44.625848784   12.18 11.20     ~ 254 0
12 NGC 4111 GiP 12 07 03.1334091672 +43 03 56.345868252 12.07 11.63 10.74     ~ 332 1
13 NGC 4143 LIN 12 09 36.0679174440 +42 32 03.031963368   13.04 12.08     ~ 227 0
14 NGC 4203 LIN 12 15 05.0549203560 +33 11 50.383965120   12.98 11.99     ~ 483 2
15 NGC 4233 GiG 12 17 07.690 +07 37 27.96   13.2       ~ 161 0
16 NGC 4435 GiG 12 27 40.503 +13 04 44.48 12.23 11.74 10.80     ~ 436 2
17 NGC 4459 H2G 12 29 00.0329905416 +13 58 42.826603332   11.6       ~ 530 0
18 IC 875 GiG 13 17 07.5495686928 +57 32 22.150788792   13.9       ~ 50 0
19 NGC 5198 GiP 13 30 11.3858465016 +46 40 14.667297420   13.2       ~ 172 0
20 IC 4296 AGN 13 36 39.03253319 -33 57 57.0730368   11.52 12.99 10.00 10.79 ~ 487 2
21 NGC 5273 Sy1 13 42 08.3801616672 +35 39 15.467518836   14.01 13.12     ~ 456 0
22 NGC 5838 GiP 15 05 26.2447857696 +02 05 57.349108392   12.1   10.26   ~ 234 0
23 NGC 6278 GiP 17 00 50.3235598776 +23 00 39.735179064   13.8       ~ 155 0
24 NGC 6958 G 20 48 42.6064604520 -37 59 50.876997504 12.79 12.27 11.42 10.83   ~ 153 1
25 NGC 7743 Sy2 23 44 21.1607807112 +09 56 02.970989664   14.19 13.28     ~ 310 0
26 NAME Local Group GrG ~ ~           ~ 8145 0

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:objects in 2006A&A...453...27C and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu


2023.09.24-10:27:49

© Université de Strasbourg/CNRS

    • Contact