Do gas clouds in narrow-line regions of Seyfert galaxies come from their nuclei?
Kazuma Joh, Tohru Nagao, Keiichi Wada, Koki Terao, Takuji Yamashita

TL;DR
This study uses large spectroscopic datasets to analyze the properties of gas clouds in Seyfert galaxy NLRs, providing evidence that these clouds likely originate from the galactic nucleus via AGN outflows.
Contribution
It offers the first systematic comparison of NLR gas properties with star-forming regions, demonstrating that NLR clouds are likely transferred from the nucleus rather than being native to the host galaxy.
Findings
NLR gas clouds have higher density and velocity dispersion than star-forming regions.
NLR properties correlate with AGN activity level.
Velocity dispersion is larger in NLRs at both central and off-central regions.
Abstract
The narrow-line region (NLR) consists of gas clouds ionized by the strong radiation from the active galactic nucleus (AGN), distributed in the spatial scale of AGN host galaxies. The strong emission lines from the NLR are useful to diagnose physical and chemical properties of the interstellar medium in AGN host galaxies. However, the origin of the NLR is unclear; the gas clouds in NLRs may be originally in the host and photoionized by the AGN radiation, or they may be transferred from the nucleus with AGN-driven outflows. For studying the origin of the NLR, we systematically investigate the gas density and velocity dispersion of NLR gas clouds using a large spectroscopic data set taken from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The [S II] emission-line flux ratio and [O III] velocity width of 9,571 type-2 Seyfert galaxies and 110,041 star-forming galaxies suggest that the gas density and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
