The nuclear and extended mid-infrared emission of Seyfert galaxies
I. Garc\'ia-Bernete, C. Ramos Almeida, J.A. Acosta-Pulido, A., Alonso-Herrero, O. Gonz\'alez-Mart\'in, A. Hern\'an-Caballero, M., Pereira-Santaella, N. A. Levenson, C. Packham, E. S. Perlman, K. Ichikawa, P., Esquej, T. D\'iaz-Santos

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution mid-infrared imaging to analyze the nuclear and circumnuclear emission in a complete sample of Seyfert galaxies, revealing the dominance of AGN activity in MIR emission and the morphological diversity related to galaxy orientation and star formation.
Contribution
First high-resolution MIR imaging survey of a complete Seyfert sample, linking MIR morphology with AGN and star formation activity.
Findings
Majority of Seyferts show extended MIR emission (~30% of total)
Nuclear MIR correlates strongly with X-ray and [O IV] emissions, indicating AGN dominance
Extended MIR emission is more associated with star formation regions
Abstract
We present subarcsecond resolution mid-infrared (MIR) images obtained with 8-10 m-class ground-based telescopes of a complete volume-limited (DL<40 Mpc) sample of 24 Seyfert galaxies selected from the Swift/BAT nine month catalog. We use those MIR images to study the nuclear and circumnuclear emission of the galaxies. Using different methods to classify the MIR morphologies on scales of ~400 pc, we find that the majority of the galaxies (75-83%) are extended or possibly extended and 17-25% are point-like. This extended emission is compact and it has low surface brightness compared with the nuclear emission, and it represents, on average, ~30% of the total MIR emission of the galaxies in the sample. We find that the galaxies whose circumnuclear MIR emission is dominated by star formation show more extended emission (650+-700 pc) than AGN-dominated systems (300+-100 pc). In general, the…
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