Study of LINER sources with broad H(alpha) emission. Spectral energy distribution and multiwavelength correlations
G. Younes (1), D. Porquet (1), B. Sabra (2), J. N. Reeves (3,4), N., Grosso (1) ((1) Observatoire Astronomique de Strasbourg, France, (2), Department of Physics, Astronomy, Notre Dame University Louaize, Lebanon,, (3) Astrophysics Group, Keele University, Keele, UK

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spectral energy distributions of LINER 1s with broad Halpha emission, revealing their similarities to radio-loud quasars in radio and X-ray bands, and exploring their accretion mechanisms and emission processes.
Contribution
It provides detailed SEDs for LINER 1s, compares their properties to other AGN types, and tests models of X-ray emission origins, offering new insights into low-luminosity AGN physics.
Findings
LINER 1s have SEDs similar to radio-loud quasars in radio and X-ray bands.
They exhibit extremely faint bolometric luminosities, much lower than typical AGN.
The origin of X-ray emission remains ambiguous, with evidence supporting both RIAF and jet models.
Abstract
(Abridged) We attempt to infer the accretion mechanism and radiative processes giving rise to the SEDs of a well-defined optically-selected sample of LINERs showing a definite detection of broad Halpha emission (LINER 1s). We construct SEDs for six LINER~1s with simultaneous UV and X-ray fluxes, and we looked for multiwavelength, radio to X-ray and UV to X-ray, correlations. At a given X-ray luminosity, the average SED of the six LINER 1s in our sample: (1) resembles the SED of radio-loud quasars in the radio band, <log R_X>~-2.7, (2) exhibits a weak UV bump, <alpha_ox>~-1.17+-0.02 with a dispersion sigma=0.01, and (3) displays a X-ray spectrum similar to radio-quiet quasars. The bolometric luminosities inferred from the SEDs are extremely faint, at least two orders of magnitude lower than AGN. The X-ray bolometric correction, kappa_(2-10 keV), of our sample is lower than in the case of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
