Radio continuum and X-ray emission from the most extreme FIR-excess galaxy NGC 1377: An extremely obscured AGN revealed
F. Costagliola (1,2), R. Herrero-Illana (3), A. Lohfink (4), M., P\'erez-Torres (3,5), S. Aalto (1), S. Muller (1), A. Alberdi (1) ((1), Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden (2) IRA-INAF, Italy, (3) IAA-CSIC,, Spain, (4) University of Cambridge

TL;DR
This study reveals that NGC 1377 hosts an obscured AGN rather than a starburst, explaining its extreme FIR-excess and molecular outflow, with new radio and X-ray data supporting the AGN hypothesis.
Contribution
First detection of radio and X-ray emission in NGC 1377, providing evidence for an obscured AGN as the central energy source rather than a starburst.
Findings
Radio emission has two components: nucleus and off-nucleus hotspot.
The galaxy's FIR-excess is too extreme to be explained by star formation alone.
Evidence suggests a radio-quiet, obscured AGN of about 10^6 solar masses.
Abstract
Galaxies which strongly deviate from the radio-far IR correlation are of great importance for studies of galaxy evolution as they may be tracing early, short-lived stages of starbursts and active galactic nuclei (AGNs). The most extreme FIR-excess galaxy NGC1377 has long been interpreted as a young dusty starburst, but millimeter observations of CO lines revealed a powerful collimated molecular outflow which cannot be explained by star formation alone. We present new radio observations at 1.5 and 10 GHz obtained with the Jansky Very Large Array (JVLA) and Chandra X-ray observations towards NGC1377. The observations are compared to synthetic starburst models to constrain the properties of the central energy source. We obtained the first detection of the cm radio continuum and X-ray emission in NGC1377. We find that the radio emission is distributed in two components, one on the nucleus…
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