The central parsecs of active galactic nuclei: challenges to the torus
M. A. Prieto, M. Mezcua, J. A. Fern\'andez-Ontiveros, M. Schartmann

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution IR and optical imaging to precisely locate AGN nuclei, revealing that dust lanes often obscure the nucleus and challenge the universality of the traditional torus model in low-luminosity active galactic nuclei.
Contribution
It provides detailed dust and gas morphology at parsec scales, questioning the standard torus paradigm and suggesting alternative obscuration mechanisms in AGN.
Findings
Nuclear dust lanes cause significant obscuration of AGN nuclei.
The IR nucleus is often offset from optical peaks and behind dust filaments.
The torus may not be universal, especially in low-luminosity AGN.
Abstract
Type 2 AGN are by definition nuclei in which the broad-line region and continuum light are hidden at optical/UV wavelengths by dust. Via accurate registration of infrared (IR) Very Large Telescope adaptive optics images with optical \textit{Hubble Space Telescope} images we unambiguously identify the precise location of the nucleus of a sample of nearby, type 2 AGN. Dust extinction maps of the central few kpc of these galaxies are constructed from optical-IR colour images, which allow tracing the dust morphology at scales of few pc. In almost all cases, the IR nucleus is shifted by several tens of pc from the optical peak and its location is behind a dust filament, prompting to this being a major, if not the only, cause of the nucleus obscuration. These nuclear dust lanes have extinctions mag, sufficient to at least hide the low-luminosity AGN class, and in some cases are…
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