Host galaxy and orientation differences between AGN different types
Anamaria Gkini, Manolis Plionis, Maria Chira, Elias Koulouridis

TL;DR
This study examines the differences in host galaxy types and orientations among various AGN classes, challenging the simple unification model and suggesting co-evolution and disc obscuration effects.
Contribution
It provides evidence that host galaxy morphology and orientation influence AGN classification, indicating limitations of the standard unification paradigm.
Findings
Elliptical hosts are more common for Sy1 AGNs.
Spiral hosts show a face-on bias for Sy1 AGNs.
Results suggest disc obscuration impacts AGN type classification.
Abstract
Aims.The main purpose of this study is to investigate aspects regarding the validity of the active galactic nucleus (AGN) unification paradigm (UP). In particular, we focus on the AGN host galaxies, which according to the UP should show no systematic differences depending on the AGN classification. Methods.For the purpose of this study, we used (a) the spectroscopic Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release (DR) 14 catalogue, in order to select and classify AGNs using emission line diagnostics, up to a redshift of z=0.2, and (b) the Galaxy Zoo Project catalogue, which classifies SDSS galaxies in two broad Hubble types: spirals and ellipticals. Results.We find that the fraction of type 1 Seyfert nuclei (Sy1) hosted in elliptical galaxies is significantly larger than the corresponding fraction of any other AGN type, while there is a gradient of increasing spiral-hosts from Sy1 to…
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