Polar Dust Emission in Quasar IR SEDs and Its Correlation with Narrow Line Regions
Jianwei Lyu, George H. Rieke

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between polar dust emission and narrow line regions in quasars, revealing correlations that suggest polar dust significantly influences mid-infrared emission and challenges existing models of AGN structure.
Contribution
It demonstrates a correlation between forbidden line emission strength and mid-IR dust emission in quasars, indicating polar dust's role and proposing an alternative to the receding torus hypothesis.
Findings
Strong forbidden lines correlate with increased mid-IR dust emission.
The universal AGN template averages over different polar dust contributions.
Intrinsic IR SED of torus dust decreases beyond 5 μm.
Abstract
Polar dust has been found to play an important role in the mid-infrared emission of nearby Seyfert nuclei. If and how often polar dust exists among the quasar population is unknown due to the lack of spatially-resolved observations. In this Letter, we report correlations between the prominence of AGN forbidden line emission (commonly associated with the narrow line region) and the dust mid-IR energy output among the archetypal Palomar-Green quasar sample and other bright type-1 AGNs drawn from the SDSS, Spitzer and WISE archives. The AGN mid-IR color differences traced by WISE W2 ()W3 () and W2 ()W4 (), and near-IR to mid-IR SEDs constrained with 2MASS, WISE and Spitzer data have clear trends with the relative strength of the forbidden line regions traced by the optical \OIII and mid-IR \OIV emission lines. These…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
