X-ray and Ultraviolet Properties of AGN in Nearby Dwarf Galaxies
Vivienne F. Baldassare, Amy E. Reines, Elena Gallo, Jenny E. Greene

TL;DR
This study uses X-ray and UV observations to confirm active black holes in nearby dwarf galaxies, revealing their accretion properties and comparing them to more massive quasars, thus advancing understanding of black hole growth in small galaxies.
Contribution
First comprehensive X-ray and UV analysis of optically selected AGN in nearby dwarf galaxies, confirming active accretion and characterizing their emission properties.
Findings
All galaxies host actively accreting black holes.
X-ray luminosities exceed those from X-ray binaries, confirming AGN activity.
Dwarf AGN have lower X-ray to UV ratios than massive quasars.
Abstract
We present new Chandra X-ray Observatory and Hubble Space Telescope observations of eight optically selected broad-line AGN candidates in nearby dwarf galaxies (). Including archival Chandra observations of three additional sources, our sample contains all ten galaxies from Reines et al. (2013) with both broad H emission and narrow-line AGN ratios (6 AGNs, 4 Composites), as well as one low-metallicity dwarf galaxy with broad H and narrow-line ratios characteristic of star formation. All eleven galaxies are detected in X-rays. Nuclear X-ray luminosities range from to . In all cases except for the star forming galaxy, the nuclear X-ray luminosities are significantly higher than would be expected from X-ray binaries, providing strong confirmation that AGN and composite dwarf galaxies do…
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