High angular resolution polarimetric imaging of the nucleus of NGC 1068: Disentangling the polarising mechanisms
L. Grosset, D. Rouan, F. Marin, D. Gratadour, E. Lagadec, S. Hunziker,, M. Montarg\`es, Y. Magnard, M. Carle, J. Pragt, and C. Petit

TL;DR
This study uses high angular resolution polarimetric imaging of NGC 1068's nucleus to spatially disentangle and analyze the different polarising mechanisms, providing insights into the dust organization and physics of AGN cores.
Contribution
It presents new high-resolution polarimetric images of NGC 1068 and compares them with radiative transfer simulations to identify dominant polarising mechanisms in different regions.
Findings
Dichroic absorption accounts for about 99% of the polarised flux at the core.
Double scattering dominates in the equatorial plane.
Single scattering is prevalent in the polar outflow bi-cone.
Abstract
Polarisation is a decisive method to study the inner region of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) since it is not affected by contrast issues similarly to how classical imaging is. When coupled to high angular resolution (HAR), polarisation can help to disentangle the location of the various polarising mechanisms and then give an insight on the physics taking place on the core of AGNs. We obtained a new data set of HAR polarimetric images of the archetypal Seyfert 2 nucleus of NGC 1068 observed with SPHERE/VLT and we aim in this paper at presenting the polarisation maps and at spatially separating the location of the polarising mechanisms, thus deriving constraints on the organisation of the dust material in the inner region of this AGN. We then compared these measurements to radiative transfer simulations of scattering and dichroic absorption processes, using the Monte-Carlo code MontAGN.…
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