The Spitzer discovery of a galaxy with infrared emission solely due to AGN activity
S. Hony, F. Kemper, Paul M. Woods, J. Th. van Loon, V. Gorjian, S. C., Madden, A. A. Zijlstra, K. D. Gordon, R. Indebetouw, M. Marengo, M. Meixner,, P. Panuzzo, B. Shiao, G. C. Sloan, J. Roman-Duval, J. Mullaney, A. G. G. M., Tielens

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a galaxy whose infrared emission is solely due to AGN activity, characterized by unique spectral features and a peculiar SED lacking far-IR emission, providing insights into AGN-dominated IR sources.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of a galaxy with IR emission entirely dominated by AGN activity, including spectral and SED modeling, and introduces a diagnostic diagram for identifying similar sources.
Findings
IR spectrum shows strong silicate emission with high feature-to-continuum ratio
SED peaks at 4 micrometers with no significant host galaxy emission
Weak PAH features suggest no star formation contribution
Abstract
We present a galaxy (SAGE1CJ053634.78-722658.5) at a redshift of 0.14 of which the IR is entirely dominated by emission associated with the AGN. We present the 5-37 um Spitzer/IRS spectrum and broad wavelength SED of SAGE1CJ053634, an IR point-source detected by Spitzer/SAGE (Meixner et al 2006). The source was observed in the SAGE-Spec program (Kemper et al., 2010) and was included to determine the nature of sources with deviant IR colours. The spectrum shows a redshifted (z=0.14+-0.005) silicate emission feature with an exceptionally high feature-to-continuum ratio and weak polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) bands. We compare the source with models of emission from dusty tori around AGNs from Nenkova et al. (2008). We present a diagnostic diagram that will help to identify similar sources based on Spitzer/MIPS and Herschel/PACS photometry. The SED of SAGE1CJ053634 is peculiar…
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