Title: AGN Unification-1
1AGN Unification-1
- History
- The present status
2Aims and objectives
- Review the arguments that led to unified schemes.
- Outline the different schemes, their strengths
and weaknesses. - Suggest future lines of attack
3Whats all this Unification?
- Historically it is attempt to explain as much as
the spread of observational properties as
possible in terms of orientation effects. - Assume some axis i.e. rotation
- More generally, it is an attempt to explain the
diversity of observational properties in terms of
a simple model
4The AGN Paradigm
5Introduction
- AGN are not spherically symmetric and thus what
you see depends on from where you view them. This
is the basis of most unification models. - It was the discovery of superluminal motion and
the interpretation in terms of bulk relativistic
motion of the emitter that first made people
realize that orientation in AGN was important. - I will outline the consequences of Doppler
boosting, describe the historical development of
schemes and then review the modern evidence. - N.B. Relativistic beaming is not the only
mechanism that can make AGN emission anisotropic
6Doppler boosting
- When an emitting body is moving relativistically
the radiation received by an observer is a very
strong function of the angle between the line of
sight and the direction of motion. - The Doppler effect changes the energy and
frequency of arrival of the photons. - Relativistic aberration changes the angular
distribution of the radiation. - Is the Doppler factor
- Is the spectral index
7Practical consequences of boosting
- Superluminal motion implies Lorentz factors of 5
to 10 gt possible boosting of flux density by
1000. - Sources with the strongest cores will be those
viewed with their axes at small angles to the
l.o.s. - The highly boosted sources will only be a small
percentage of the total population. - But may be a large fraction of a flux limited
sample
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9Parent populations
- To every beamed source there will be many
unbeamed sources the parent population. - How to identify the parent population?
- Look at some emission thats isotropic e.g.
radio lobe emission, far infrared emission,
narrow-line emission, etc in the beamed
population and look for another population having
the same luminosity function for the isotropic
emission.
10History of Unification
- Rowan-Robinson (1976, ApJ, 213,635) tried to
unify Seyfert galaxies and radio sources. - Mostly wrong no beaming
- But the importance of dust and IR emission
correct. - Blandford and Rees (Pittsburgh BL Lac meeting
1978) laid the foundations for beaming
unification. (Radio loud only).
11History continued
- Scheuer and Readhead (1979, Nature,277,182)
proposed that radio core-dominated quasars and
radio quiet quasars could be unified the former
being beamed versions of the latter. - Orr and Browne (1982,MNRAS,200,1067 ) realized
the the Scheuer and Readhead scheme could not
work because MERLIN and VLA had shown that most
of the core-dominated quasars had extended
(isotropic) radio emission and thus their parent
population could not be radio quiet. We looked
for a non-radio quiet parent population - Proposed core-dominated/lobe-dominated
unification for quasars
12Radio Galaxy/Quasar Unification(Both are FR2s)
- Widely discussed before, but first published by
Barthel (1989, ApJ, 336,606) an extension of
core-dominated/lobe-dominated quasar unification. - Quasars have strong continuum and broad lines and
radio galaxies (FR2s) have little continuum
(other than starlight) and no broad lines. - How could they be the same thing? Only if one
could hide the quasar nucleus with something
optically thick (a molecular torus). - N.B. In a parallel line of development Antonucci
and Miller had discovered polarized broad lines
in the Seyfert 2 NGC1068 which they interpreted
as being scattered nuclear radiation from a
hidden BLR.
13The AGN Paradigm
14BL Lacs and FR1 RGs
- Similar arguments apply to these intrinsically
lower luminosity objects BL Lacs are the beamed
cores of FR1 RGs. (Note FR1 RGs generally have
only weak and narrow emission lines and BLLacs
are almost lineless.) - Blandford and Rees (1978)
- Browne (1983, MNRAS,204,23)
- Antonucci and Ulvestad (1985,ApJ,294,158)
- Padovani and Urry (1991, ApJ,368,373)
15Evidence for BL Lac/FR1 unification
- The statistics look ok (Browne Padovani and
Urry) for reasonable Lorentz factors - The required relativistic jets are seen in a few
FR1s, most notably in M87 (Biretta AJ,520,621). - The strength of optical cores in FR1s seems to
correlate with the strength of the radio core
consistent with both being beamed (Capetti
Celotti,1999,MNRAS,303,434, Chiaberge et al.
2000,AA,358,104) - gt No hidden BLR in FR1s (but BL Lac has a broad
line)
16HST Image of jet in M87
- M87 is and FR1 radio galaxy
- Superluminal motion has been detected in both
radio and optical
17Evidence for superluminal motion in M87
18NGC6251
- HST image of the optical core.
- Despite dust lane (dark band) the core is clearly
visible - The strength of cores correlated with that of
radio core
19Correlation between optical nuclear and radio
core luminosities (Chiaberge et al,AA,358,104)
20Unification across the FR1/FR2 boundary?
- There does seem to be a real distiction between
FR1s and FR2s - Radio structure
- Radio luminosity
- Optical emission line properties (but remember BL
Lac) - Cosmological evolution
- But the non-thermal emission is similar in both
- Also FR2s could possibly evolve into FR1s
- There is no strong evidence against this
(Unification by time?)
21FR2s evolving into FR1s?
- Assume
- FR2s are objects with relativistic jets that
reach the full extent of the radio source - That the distance that jets can travel at
relativistic speeds depends on jet power high
power jets make it further out. - Then young small sources of a given jet power
will be FR2s, but as they grow and get older they
will become FR1s - Some crossing of the FR boundary with time for
lower-power objects. - (N.B. There are some FR2s with weak emission
lines which when beamed may become BL Lacs)
22Tests of radio galaxy/quasar unification
- The relative numbers of FR2 RGs and Qs (about
21 gt half-cone angle of 45 degrees) should be
related to the size of the un-obscured cone angle
hence can calculate by what factor the radio
sizes of Qs should be smaller than RGs. - The results are mixed but do not rule anything
out. - If the quasar nucleus is hidden by dust the
intercepted energy should be re-radiated in the
FIR. Qs and RGs should have same FIR luminosity. - Seems just about ok
23Tests continued
- Broad lines should be detectable in narrow line
RGs either in scattered polarized light or in
the IR. - Some examples of both are seen as well as some UV
broad lines (e.g. Cygnus A) - Narrow emission lines well away from the torus
should have the same luminosity in RGs and Qs of
intrinsically the same power. - OIII is stronger in Qs (Jackson and Browne)
- OII is the same (Hes et al.)
- The Q luminosity function should be a beamed
version of the RG one (Urry and Padovani) - This works
24Orientation indicators in radio-loud objects
- The ratio of an isotropic emission to a beamed
emission should be an indicator of orientation. - R Radio core/radio extended
- (Hine and Longair Orr and Browne)
- R5000 Radio core/5000 Angstrom continuum
- (Wills Brotherton, 1995,ApJ,448,81 )
- Can we use these to deduce something about the
inner regions of AGN?
25Correlations Emission lines
- (Wills Baker Corbin Barthel Brotherton,
Jackson, Browne and others have had fun in this
area) - The goal is to use correlation to test models
and, more important, to learn about the inner
regions of radio galaxies and quasars. - What has been learnt?
- H-beta FWHM anti-correlates with R gt disk-like
BLR (Wills and Browne). (Also some broadlines
have disk-like profiles) - OII and OIII equivalent widths suggests
extinction even in the inner NLR (Baker, Barthel,
Jackson Browne) - Even the thermal (disk) continuum is orientation
dependent in quasars. - I cannot make sense of the wealth of information!
26Correlations -- Radio
- If jets are relativistic, some unification is
inevitable. Whats the evidence for relativistic
jets? - Superluminal motion (rarely measurable in RGs)
- Jet asymmetry (X-ray jets seen with Chandra need
relativistic motion to give enough IC emission) - Laing Garrington effect
- Even in radio galaxies, the side of the source
with the jet is less depolarized - gt Jet asymmetry arises from orientation and
hence they are relativistic.
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28Radio map of 3C175
29CHANDRA X-Ray Jet in Pictor-A
30Wider Unification
- Stimulated by the discovery of polarized broad
lines in a Seyfert 2 (narrow-line Seyfert) by
Antonucci and Miller (1985,ApJ,297,621), in the
mid 1980s the optical community realized that AGN
were not spherically symmetric and that
orientation effects were important. - There emerged the standard model the key
ingredient of which is the obscuring torus
which hides the inner part of all AGN (BLR plus
disk emission), both radio-quiet and radio-loud
31The Structure of AGN
Seyfert 1
Narrow Line Region
Torus
Central Engine Accretion DiskBlack Hole
Seyfert 2
Broad Line Region
32Evidence for the standard model
- More hidden BLR seen in scattered (polarized)
light. - Ionization cones.
- Though many claimed not many are convincing
- Photoionization considerations some Seyfert 2s
do not have enough ionization photons seen to
give the NLR luminosity - Molecular disks, particularly NGC4258
33Ionization cone in NGC 5728
- If ionizing photons are blocked by the torus then
one expects to see cones delineating the
boundary.
34Conclusions about RG/Q unification
- Some radio FR2 galaxies have hidden Qs
- The simplest picture where there is a single
un-obscured cone angle for all objects needs
elaboration. - Perhaps the Andy Lawrence (MN, 252,586) and Heino
Falcke idea of a cone angle that depends on
intrinsic luminosity (receding torus) is one of
the most promising. - Unified schemes seem to have run out of
predictive power!