Buried AGNs in Advanced Mergers:Mid-infrared color selection as a dual AGN finder
Shobita Satyapal, Nathan J. Secrest, Claudio Ricci, Sara L.Ellison,, Barry Rothberg, Laura Blecha, Anca Constantin, Mario Gliozzi, Paul McNulty,, and Jason Ferguson

TL;DR
This study uses mid-infrared color selection combined with X-ray and near-infrared observations to identify obscured dual AGNs in advanced galaxy mergers, revealing a significant population missed by optical surveys.
Contribution
It demonstrates that mid-infrared pre-selection effectively uncovers obscured dual AGNs in late-stage mergers, which are often missed by optical methods.
Findings
Four out of six mergers host at least one AGN.
Potential dual AGNs identified with projected separations less than 10 kpc.
Buried AGNs exhibit high absorption with N_H > 10^24 cm^-2.
Abstract
A direct consequence of hierarchical galaxy formation is the existence of dual supermassive black holes (SMBHs), which may be preferentially triggered as active galactic nuclei (AGN) during galaxy mergers. Despite decades of searching, however, dual AGNs are extremely rare, and most have been discovered serendipitously. Using the all-sky WISE survey, we identified a population of over 100 morphologically identified interacting galaxies or mergers that display red mid-infrared colors often associated in extragalactic sources with powerful AGNs. The vast majority of these advanced mergers are optically classified as star-forming galaxies suggesting that they may represent an obscured population of AGNs that cannot be found through optical studies. In this work, we present Chandra/ACIS observations and near-infrared spectra with the Large Binocular Telescope of six advanced mergers with…
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