The Incidence of Active Galactic Nuclei in Pure Disk Galaxies: The Spitzer View
S. Satyapal, T. Boeker, W. Mcalpine, M. Gliozzi, N. P. Abel, T., Heckman

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer mid-infrared spectroscopy to investigate the presence of active galactic nuclei in bulgeless disk galaxies, finding AGNs are rare but often associated with nuclear star clusters, revealing insights into black hole formation in such galaxies.
Contribution
First systematic mid-IR survey of bulgeless galaxies showing AGN occurrence is rare and linked to nuclear star clusters, advancing understanding of black hole presence without bulges.
Findings
Detected AGN in one galaxy via [NeV] line.
AGN detection rate is 30-40% in optically quiescent pseudobulge galaxies.
AGNs are absent in most bulgeless disks, indicating rarity.
Abstract
We have conducted a high-resolution spectroscopic study using Spitzer of 18 bulgeless (Sd/Sdm) galaxies that show no definitive signatures of nuclear activity in their optical spectra. This is the first systematic mid-IR search for weak or hidden AGNs in a statistically significant sample of bulgeless disk galaxies. Based on the detection of the high-ionization [NeV] line, we report the discovery of an AGN in one out of the 18 galaxies in the sample. This galaxy, NGC 4178, is a nearby edge-on Sd galaxy, which likely hosts a prominent nuclear star cluster (NSC). The bolometric luminosity of the AGN inferred from the [NeV] luminosity is ~ 8e41 ergs/s. This is almost two orders of magnitude greater than the luminosity of the AGN in NGC 4395, the best studied AGN in a bulgeless disk galaxy. Assuming that the AGN in NGC 4178 is radiating below the Eddington limit, the lower mass limit for…
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