Obscuration in extremely luminous quasars
M. Polletta, D. Weedman, S. Hoenig, C.J. Lonsdale, H.E. Smith, J., Houck

TL;DR
This study models the IR spectra of obscured quasars to understand their structure, revealing a wide range of torus inclinations and a significant cold dust component, with implications for the unified model of AGNs.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed modeling of IR spectra for a large sample of obscured quasars, highlighting the diversity in torus orientations and the role of cold dust in obscuration.
Findings
Approximately 35-41% of luminous QSOs are unobscured.
The torus half opening angle is about 67 degrees, supporting the receding torus model.
A significant cold dust component contributes to obscuration in some sources.
Abstract
The spectral energy distributions and infrared (IR) spectra of a sample of obscured AGNs selected in the mid-IR are modeled with recent clumpy torus models to investigate the nature of the sources, the properties of the obscuring matter, and dependencies on luminosity. The sample contains 21 obscured AGNs at z=1.3-3 discovered in the largest Spitzer surveys (SWIRE, NDWFS, & FLS) by means of their extremely red IR to optical colors. All sources show the 9.7micron silicate feature in absorption and have extreme mid-IR luminosities (L(6micron)~10^46 erg/s). The IR SEDs and spectra of 12 sources are well reproduced with a simple torus model, while the remaining 9 sources require foreground extinction from a cold dust component to reproduce both the depth of the silicate feature and the near-IR emission from hot dust. The best-fit torus models show a broad range of inclinations, with no…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
