The size-luminosity relation of local active galactic nuclei from interferometric observations of the broad-line region
GRAVITY Collaboration: A. Amorim, G. Bourdarot, W. Brandner, Y. Cao,, Y. Cl\'enet, R. Davies, P. T. de Zeeuw, J. Dexter, A. Drescher, A. Eckart, F., Eisenhauer, M. Fabricius, H. Feuchtgruber, N. M. F\"orster Schreiber, P. J., V. Garcia, R. Genzel, S. Gillessen, D. Gratadour

TL;DR
This study uses interferometric observations to analyze the size-luminosity relation of the broad-line regions in local active galactic nuclei, providing new measurements and insights into their structure and black hole masses.
Contribution
It presents new interferometric data for four AGNs, constrains the BLR radius-luminosity relation independently of reverberation mapping, and explores spatial offsets in the emission regions.
Findings
BLR radii are smaller at high luminosity than predicted by the R-L relation.
Black hole masses are consistent with the M-sigma relation.
Detected spatial offsets between hot dust and BLR photocenters related to luminosity.
Abstract
By using the GRAVITY instrument with the near-infrared (NIR) Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI), the structure of the broad (emission-)line region (BLR) in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) can be spatially resolved, allowing the central black hole (BH) mass to be determined. This work reports new NIR VLTI/GRAVITY interferometric spectra for four type 1 AGNs (Mrk 509, PDS 456, Mrk 1239, and IC 4329A) with resolved broad-line emission. Dynamical modelling of interferometric data constrains the BLR radius and central BH mass measurements for our targets and reveals outflow-dominated BLRs for Mrk 509 and PDS 456. We present an updated radius-luminosity (R-L) relation independent of that derived with reverberation mapping (RM) measurements using all the GRAVITY-observed AGNs. We find our R-L relation to be largely consistent with that derived from RM measurements except at high…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
