Torus and AGN properties of nearby Seyfert galaxies: Results from fitting IR spectral energy distributions and spectroscopy
Almudena Alonso-Herrero (1, 2), Cristina Ramos Almeida (3), Rachel, Mason (4), Andres Asensio Ramos (5, 6), Patrick F. Roche (7), Nancy A., Levenson (8), Moshe Elitzur (9), Christopher Packham (10), Jose Miguel, Rodriguez Espinosa (5, 6), Stuart Young (11)

TL;DR
This study used IR spectral fitting and spectroscopy to constrain the properties of dusty tori in nearby Seyfert galaxies, revealing insights into their structure, orientation, and the receding torus phenomenon across different luminosities.
Contribution
First application of Bayesian IR SED fitting to Seyfert galaxies to constrain torus parameters and explore the receding torus hypothesis.
Findings
Tori are compact, 1-6 pc in radius.
Type 1 AGNs have higher escape probabilities.
Evidence suggests lower torus covering factors at higher luminosities.
Abstract
We used the CLUMPY torus models and a Bayesian approach to fit the infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and ground-based high-angular resolution mid-infrared spectroscopy of 13 nearby Seyfert galaxies. This allowed us to put tight constraints on torus model parameters such as the viewing angle, the radial thickness of the torus Y, the angular size of the cloud distribution sigma_torus, and the average number of clouds along radial equatorial rays N_0. The viewing angle is not the only parameter controlling the classification of a galaxy into a type 1 or a type 2. In principle type 2s could be viewed at any viewing angle as long as there is one cloud along the line of sight. A more relevant quantity for clumpy media is the probability for an AGN photon to escape unabsorbed. In our sample, type 1s have relatively high escape probabilities, while in type 2s, as expected, tend to…
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.
