The Galaxy Zoo survey for giant AGN-ionized clouds: past and present black-hole accretion events
William C. Keel, S. Drew Chojnowski, Vardha N. Bennert, Kevin, Schawinski, Chris J. Lintott, Stuart Lynn, Anna Pancoast, Chelsea Harris, A., M. Nierenberg, Alessandro Sonnenfeld, and Richard Proctor

TL;DR
This study uses extended emission-line regions around low-redshift galaxies to investigate the history and variability of AGN activity over tens to hundreds of thousands of years, revealing evidence of long-term luminosity changes.
Contribution
It presents a new survey identifying 19 galaxies with large-scale AGN-ionized regions, providing insights into AGN variability and the role of galaxy interactions in ionized gas distribution.
Findings
Identified 19 galaxies with extended AGN-ionized regions beyond 10 kpc.
Found evidence of AGN fading or obscuration over 100,000-year timescales.
Many ionized regions are associated with interacting or merging galaxies.
Abstract
Some active galactic nuclei (AGN) are surrounded by extended emission-line regions (EELRs), which trace both the illumination pattern of escaping radiation and its history over the light-travel time from the AGN to the gas. From a new set of such EELRs, we present evidence that the AGN in many Seyfert galaxies undergo luminous episodes 20,000-200,000 years in duration. Motivated by the discovery of the spectacular nebula known as Hanny's Voorwerp, ionized by a powerful AGN which has apparently faded dramatically within ~ 100,000 years, Galaxy Zoo volunteers have carried out both targeted and serendipitous searches for similar emission-line clouds around low-redshift galaxies.We present the resulting list of candidates and describe spectroscopy identifying 19 galaxies with AGN-ionized regions at projected radii > 10 kpc. This search recovered known EELRs and identified additional…
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