Surprisingly Strong K-band Emission Found in Low Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei
Antoine Dumont, Anil Seth, Jay Strader, Jenny E. Greene, Leonard, Burtscher, Nadine Neumayer

TL;DR
This study reveals unexpectedly strong K-band infrared emission in low-luminosity active galactic nuclei, indicating hot dust and potential jet contributions, with implications for future JWST observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that low-luminosity AGNs exhibit significant hot dust emission in the K-band, challenging previous assumptions and highlighting the importance of infrared observations.
Findings
NIR emission correlates with X-ray flux with high significance.
NIR emission often exceeds X-ray luminosity at very low Eddington ratios.
Hot dust emission detected in 14 out of 15 low-luminosity AGNs.
Abstract
We examine the near-infrared (NIR) emission from low-luminosity AGNs (LLAGNs). Our galaxy sample includes 15 objects with detected 2-10 keV X-ray emission, dynamical black hole mass estimates from the literature, and available Gemini/NIFS integral field spectroscopy (IFU) data. We find evidence for red continuum components at the center of most galaxies, consistent with the hot dust emission seen in higher luminosity AGN. We decompose the spectral data cubes into a stellar and continuum component, assuming the continuum component comes from thermal emission from hot dust. We detect nuclear thermal emission in 14 out of 15 objects. This emission causes weaker CO absorption lines and redder continuum (m) in our -band data, as expected from hot dust around an AGN. The NIR emission is clearly correlated with the 2-10 keV X-ray flux, with a Spearman coefficient of…
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