Why are optical coronal lines faint in active galactic nuclei?
Jeffrey D. McKaig, Shobita Satyapal, Ari Laor, Nicholas P. Abel, Sara, M. Doan, Claudio Ricci, Jenna M. Cann

TL;DR
This study investigates why optical coronal lines are faint in active galactic nuclei despite their high-energy radiation, revealing dust depletion and ionizing conditions as key factors affecting their visibility.
Contribution
The paper uses photoionization modeling to identify dust depletion and radiation hardness as main reasons for the rarity of optical coronal lines in AGN spectra.
Findings
Dust reduces optical CL strength by ~1000 times.
Lower ionization potential lines like [O III] are less affected by dust.
Dustless, hard-SED gas produces strong optical CLs.
Abstract
Forbidden collisionally excited optical atomic transitions from high ionization potential (IP54.8\,eV) ions, such as Ca, Ne, Fe, Fe, Fe, Ar, and S, are known as optical coronal lines (CLs). The spectral energy distribution (SED) of active galactic nuclei (AGN) typically extends to hundreds of electron volts and above, which should be able to produce such highly ionized gas. However, optical CLs are often not detected in AGN. Here we use photoionization calculations with the \textsc{Cloudy} spectral synthesis code to determine possible reasons for the rarity of these optical CLs. We calculate CL luminosities and equivalent widths from radiation pressure confined photoionized gas slabs exposed to an AGN continuum. We consider the role of dust, metallicity, and ionizing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
