The nature of nuclear Halpha emission in LINERs
J.Masegosa, I. M\'arquez, A.Ramirez, O. Gonz\'alez-Mart\'in

TL;DR
This study uses HST Halpha imaging of 32 LINERs to analyze their ionized gas structures, revealing common unresolved nuclei, diverse morphologies, and a size-luminosity relation similar to Seyferts, suggesting a shared origin of their narrow-line regions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed morphological classification of LINERs' ionized gas and establishes a size-luminosity relation linking Halpha emission to X-ray luminosity.
Findings
84% of LINERs have unresolved nuclear sources.
Morphologies include outflows, core-halo, and spiral disks.
A size-luminosity relation similar to Seyferts was found.
Abstract
To get insight in the nature of the ionized gas in the nuclear region of LINERs we have performed a study of HST Halpha imaging of 32 LINERs. The main conclusion from this analysis is that for the large majority of LINERs (84%) an unresolved nuclear source has been identified as well as extended emission with equivalent sizes ranging from few tens till about hundredths of parsecs. Their morphologies appear not to be homogeneous being basically grouped into three classes:nuclear outflow candidates (42%), core-halo morphologies (25%) and nuclear spiral disks (14%). Clumpy structures reminiscent of young stellar clusters are not a common property on LINERs. The remaining 5 galaxies are too dusty to allow a clear view of the ionized gas distribution. A size-luminosity relation has been found between the equivalent radius of the Halpha emission and the (2-10 keV) X-ray luminosities. Both…
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