The Inner Kiloparsec of Mrk 273 with Keck Adaptive Optics
Vivian U (1,9), Anne Medling (2), David Sanders (1), Claire Max (2),, Lee Armus (3), Kazushi Iwasawa (4), Aaron Evans (5, 6), Lisa Kewley (1, 7),, and Giovanni Fazio (8) ((1) IfA, University of Hawaii, (2) Dept. of Astronomy, and Astrophysics, UC Santa Cruz

TL;DR
This study uses Keck adaptive optics to resolve the nuclear structure of Mrk 273, confirming an active nucleus, revealing a rotating gas disk with a supermassive black hole, and identifying a potential dual AGN system.
Contribution
First near-infrared integral-field spectroscopy of Mrk 273's nuclei with adaptive optics, revealing detailed gas kinematics and evidence for a dual AGN scenario.
Findings
Confirmed the presence of an AGN in the southwest nucleus.
Discovered a rotating gas disk with a supermassive black hole in the north nucleus.
Identified a third component with extended coronal-line emission, suggesting possible dual AGN activity.
Abstract
There is X-ray, optical, and mid-infrared imaging and spectroscopic evidence that the late-stage ultraluminous infrared galaxy merger Mrk 273 hosts a powerful active galactic nucleus (AGN). However, the exact location of the AGN and the nature of the nuclei have been difficult to determine due to dust obscuration and the limited wavelength coverage of available high-resolution data. Here we present near-infrared integral-field spectra and images of the nuclear region of Mrk 273 taken with OSIRIS and NIRC2 on the Keck II Telescope with laser guide star adaptive optics. We observe three spatially resolved components, and analyze the local molecular and ionized gas emission lines and their kinematics. We confirm the presence of the hard X-ray AGN in the southwest nucleus. In the north nucleus, we find a strongly rotating gas disk whose kinematics indicate a central black hole of mass 1.04…
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