The spectral energy distribution of the central parsecs of the nearest AGN
M. A. Prieto (IAC, Tenerife), J. Reunanen (Tuorla Observatory,, University of Turku), K. R. W. Tristram (MPIfR, Bonn), N. Neumayer (ESO,, Garching), J. A. Fernandez-Ontiveros (IAC, Tenerife), M. Orienti (IAC,, Tenerife), K. Meisenheimer (MPIA, Heidelberg)

TL;DR
This study presents high-resolution spectral energy distributions of nearby AGNs, revealing key features like IR bumps and X-ray spectra, and challenges common IR-based AGN classification criteria, emphasizing the importance of spatial resolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed, core-region SEDs of nearby AGNs, highlighting differences from large aperture data and proposing a luminosity threshold for AGN dominance.
Findings
IR bump accounts for >70% of total energy output
Large aperture IR data can overestimate AGN luminosity by up to two orders of magnitude
AGN luminosity threshold around 10^{44} erg/s for host galaxy dominance
Abstract
Spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the central few tens of parsec region of some of the nearest, most well studied, active galactic nuclei (AGN) are presented. These genuine AGN-core SEDs, mostly from Seyfert galaxies, are characterised by two main features: an IR bump with the maximum in the 2-10 micron range, and an increasing X-ray spectrum in the 1 to ~200 keV region. These dominant features are common to Seyfert type 1 and 2 objects alike. Type 2 AGN exhibit a sharp drop shortward of 2 micron, with the optical to UV region being fully absorbed, while type 1s show instead a gentle 2 micron drop ensued by a secondary, partially-absorbed optical to UV emission bump. Assuming the bulk of optical to UV photons generated in these AGN are reprocessed by dust and re-emitted in the IR in an isotropic manner, the IR bump luminosity represents >70% of the total energy output in these…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
