# Growing supermassive black holes in the late stages of galaxy mergers   are heavily obscured

**Authors:** C. Ricci., F. E. Bauer, E. Treister, K. Schawinski, G. C. Privon, L., Blecha, P. Arevalo, L. Armus, F. Harrison, L. C. Ho, K. Iwasawa, D. B., Sanders, D. Stern

arXiv: 1701.04825 · 2017-03-21

## TL;DR

This study reveals that supermassive black holes in late-stage galaxy mergers are heavily obscured by gas and dust, with a higher fraction of Compton-thick AGN compared to isolated galaxies, indicating intense material funneling during mergers.

## Contribution

It provides new observational evidence that late-stage galaxy mergers significantly increase obscuration around SMBHs, challenging classical AGN unification models.

## Key findings

- Higher fraction of Compton-thick AGN in late mergers (65%)
- Maximum obscuration occurs at galaxy nuclei separation of 0.4-10.8 kpc
- Obscuring material covers over 95% of the X-ray source in late mergers

## Abstract

Mergers of galaxies are thought to cause significant gas inflows to the inner parsecs, which can activate rapid accretion onto supermassive black holes (SMBHs), giving rise to Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN). During a significant fraction of this process, SMBHs are predicted to be enshrouded by gas and dust. Studying 52 galactic nuclei in infrared-selected local Luminous and Ultra-luminous infrared galaxies in different merger stages in the hard X-ray band, where radiation is less affected by absorption, we find that the amount of material around SMBHs increases during the last phases of the merger. We find that the fraction of Compton-thick (CT, $N_{\rm\,H}\geq 10^{24}\rm\,cm^{-2}$) AGN in late merger galaxies is higher ($f_{\rm\,CT}=65^{+12}_{-13}\%$) than in local hard X-ray selected AGN ($f_{\rm\,CT}=27\pm 4\%$), and that obscuration reaches its maximum when the nuclei of the two merging galaxies are at a projected distance of $D_{12}\simeq0.4-10.8$ kiloparsecs ($f_{\rm\,CT}=77_{-17}^{+13}\%$). We also find that all AGN of our sample in late merger galaxies have $N_{\rm\,H}> 10^{23}\rm\,cm^{-2}$, which implies that the obscuring material covers $95^{+4}_{-8}\%$ of the X-ray source. These observations show that the material is most effectively funnelled from the galactic scale to the inner tens of parsecs during the late stages of galaxy mergers, and that the close environment of SMBHs in advanced mergers is richer in gas and dust with respect to that of SMBHs in isolated galaxies, and cannot be explained by the classical AGN unification model in which the torus is responsible for the obscuration.

## Full text

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## Figures

78 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.04825/full.md

## References

177 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.04825/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.04825