Parsec-scale dust emission from the polar region in the type 2 nucleus of NGC 424
Sebastian F. Hoenig (1), Makoto Kishimoto (2), Robert Antonucci (1),, Alessandro Marconi (3), M. Almudena Prieto (4), Konrad Tristram (2), Gerd, Weigelt (2) ((1) UCSB, (2) MPIfR, (3) Univ. Firenze, (4) IAC)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution mid-IR interferometry to reveal that in NGC 424, most of the parsec-scale dust emission originates from polar regions, challenging traditional models of the AGN dust torus.
Contribution
First direct interferometric evidence that the dominant mid-IR emission in a type 2 AGN comes from polar dust, prompting a revision of AGN IR emission models.
Findings
Majority (>60%) of mid-IR emission from polar dust in NGC 424
Extended mid-IR emission size increases with wavelength
Polar dust likely driven by radiative winds, not just torus
Abstract
Advancements in infrared IR open up the possibility to spatially resolve AGN on the parsec-scale level and study the circumnuclear dust distribution, commonly referred to as the "dust torus", that is held responsible for the type 1/type 2 dichotomy of AGN. We used the mid-IR beam combiner MIDI together with the 8m telescopes at the VLTI to observe the nucleus of the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 424, achieving an almost complete coverage of the uv-plane accessible by the available telescope configurations. We detect extended mid-IR emission with a relatively baseline- and model-independent mid-IR half-light radius of (2.0 \pm 0.2) pc \times (1.5 \pm 0.3) pc (averaged over the 8-13 {\mu}m wavelength range). The extended mid-IR source shows an increasing size with wavelength. The orientation of the major axis in position angle -27deg is closely aligned with the system axis as set by optical…
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