Stellar Photometric Structures of the Host Galaxies of Nearby Type 1 Active Galactic Nuclei
Minjin Kim, Luis C. Ho, Chien Y. Peng, Aaron J. Barth, Myungshin Im

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution Hubble images to analyze the structures of host galaxies of nearby Type 1 AGNs, revealing correlations between galaxy morphology, AGN properties, and evolutionary history.
Contribution
It provides a detailed morphological analysis of 235 low-redshift Type 1 AGN hosts, including structural decomposition and asymmetry quantification, linking galaxy features with AGN characteristics.
Findings
Narrow-line AGNs are in later type, less luminous, less disturbed galaxies.
Merger signatures are more common in more luminous AGN hosts.
Radio-loud AGNs are in more massive, bulge-dominated galaxies, with no strong merger evidence.
Abstract
We present detailed image analysis of rest-frame optical images of 235 low-redshift ( 0.35) type 1 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) observed with the Hubble Space Telescope. The high-resolution images enable us to perform rigorous two-dimensional image modeling to decouple the luminous central point source from the host galaxy, which, when warranted, is further decomposed into its principal structural components (bulge, bar, and disk). In many cases, care must be taken to account for structural complexities such as spiral arms, tidal features, and overlapping or interacting companion galaxies. We employ Fourier modes to characterize the degree of asymmetry of the light distribution of the stars, as a quantitative measure of morphological distortion due to interactions or mergers. We examine the dependence of the physical parameters of the host galaxies on the properties of the…
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