A New Physical Picture for AGNs Lacking Optical Emission Lines
Christopher J. Agostino, Samir Salim, Sara L. Ellison, Robert W., Bickley, S. M. Faber

TL;DR
This study investigates optically dull AGNs, revealing they are part of a continuous distribution with typical AGNs, and links their optical emission line weakness to host galaxy gas content rather than obscuration or dilution.
Contribution
It demonstrates that optically dull AGNs are not a separate class but the underluminous tail of the L_[OIII]–L_X relation, emphasizing the role of host galaxy gas in emission line strength.
Findings
Optically dull AGNs are part of a continuous L_[OIII]–L_X relation.
Underluminous [OIII] correlates with host galaxy gas content.
Most X-ray AGNs are identifiable via BPT diagram despite weak lines.
Abstract
In this work, we use ~500 low-redshift (z ~ 0.1) X-ray AGNs observed by XMM-Newton and SDSS to investigate the prevalence and nature of AGNs that apparently lack optical emission lines (``optically dull AGNs''). Although 1/4 of spectra appear absorption-line dominated in visual assessment, line extraction with robust continuum subtraction from the MPA/JHU catalog reveals usable [OIII] measurements in 98% of the sample, allowing us to study [OIII]-underluminous AGNs together with more typical AGNs in the context of the L--L relation. We find that ``optically dull AGNs'' do not constitute a distinct population of AGNs. Instead, they are the [OIII]-underluminous tail of a single, unimodal L--L relation that has substantial scatter (0.6 dex). We find the degree to which an AGN is underluminous in [OIII] correlates with the specific SFR or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
