The SED of Low-Luminosity AGNs at high-spatial resolution
J. A. Fern\'andez-Ontiveros, M. A. Prieto, J. A. Acosta-Pulido, and M., Montes

TL;DR
This study constructs high-resolution, multiwavelength spectral energy distributions for low-luminosity AGNs, revealing diverse inner structures and significant differences from brighter AGNs, indicating structural changes at low luminosities.
Contribution
It provides the first high-resolution, multiwavelength SEDs for LLAGNs, highlighting their structural diversity and deviations from standard AGN models.
Findings
LLAGNs show diverse SED shapes, including synchrotron and thermal features.
Inner structures like the torus and accretion disk change at low luminosities.
Significant differences from bright Seyferts and quasars are observed.
Abstract
The inner structure of AGNs is expected to change below a certain luminosity limit. The big blue bump, footprint of the accretion disk, is absent for the majority of low-luminosity AGNs (LLAGNs). Moreover, recent simulations suggest that the torus, a keystone in the Unified Model, vanishes for nuclei with L_bol < 10^42 erg/s. However, the study of LLAGN is a complex task due to the contribution of the host galaxy, which light swamps these faint nuclei. This is specially critical in the IR range, at the maximum of the torus emission, due to the contribution of the old stellar population and/or dust in the nuclear region. Adaptive optics imaging in the NIR (VLT/NaCo) together with diffraction limited imaging in the mid-IR (VLT/VISIR) permit us to isolate the nuclear emission for some of the nearest LLAGNs in the Southern Hemisphere. These data were extended to the optical/UV range (HST),…
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