The nature of LINER galaxies: Ubiquitous hot old stars and rare accreting black holes
R. Singh, G. van de Ven, K. Jahnke, M. Lyubenova, J. Falc\'on-Barroso,, J. Alves, R. Cid Fernandes, L. Galbany, R. Garc\'ia-Benito, B. Husemann, R., C. Kennicutt, R. A. Marino, I. M\'arquez, J. Masegosa, D. Mast, A. Pasquali,, S. F. S\'anchez, J. Walcher, V. Wild, L. Wisotzki

TL;DR
This study challenges the traditional view that LINER galaxies are powered by low-luminosity AGNs, showing instead that evolved stars, specifically post-AGB stars, are the primary ionising source in these galaxies.
Contribution
The paper provides observational evidence that LINER emission is mainly caused by evolved stars rather than AGNs, offering a new interpretation of LINER galaxies based on stellar populations.
Findings
Radial emission profiles inconsistent with a central AGN source.
Post-AGB stars can account for LINER-like emission in most galaxies.
LINER emission correlates with old stellar populations in massive galaxies.
Abstract
Galaxies, which often contain ionised gas, sometimes also exhibit a so-called low-ionisation nuclear emission line region (LINER). For 30 years this was attributed to a central mass-accreting supermassive black hole (AGN) of low luminosity, making LINER galaxies the largest AGN-sub-population, dominating in numbers over higher luminosity Seyfert galaxies and quasars. This, however, poses a serious problem. While the inferred energy balance is plausible, many LINERs clearly do not contain any other independent signatures of an AGN. Using integral field spectroscopic data from the CALIFA survey, we aim at comparing the observed radial surface brightness profiles with what is expected from illumination by an AGN. Essential for this analysis is a proper extraction of emission-lines, especially weak lines such as the Balmer Hb line which is superposed on an absorption trough. To accomplish…
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