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The dust sublimation region of the Type 1 AGN NGC 4151 at a hundred microarcsecond scale as resolved by the CHARA array interferometer

The dust sublimation region of the Type 1 AGN NGC 4151 at a hundred microarcsecond scale as resolved by the CHARA array interferometer
The dust sublimation region of the Type 1 AGN NGC 4151 at a hundred microarcsecond scale as resolved by the CHARA array interferometer
The nuclear region of Type 1 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) has only been partially resolved so far in the near-infrared (IR), where we expect to see the dust sublimation region and the nucleus directly without obscuration. Here, we present the near-IR interferometric observation of the brightest Type 1 AGN NGC 4151 at long baselines of ∼250 m using the CHARA Array, reaching structures at hundred microarcsecond scales. The squared visibilities decrease down to as low as ∼0.25, definitely showing that the structure is resolved. Furthermore, combining with the previous visibility measurements at shorter baselines but at different position angles, we show that the structure is elongated perpendicular to the polar axis of the nucleus, as defined by optical polarization and a linear radio jet. A thin-ring fit gives a minor/major axis ratio of ∼0.7 at a radius ∼0.5 mas (∼0.03 pc). This is consistent with the case where the sublimating dust grains are distributed preferentially in the equatorial plane in a ring-like geometry, viewed at an inclination angle of ∼40°. The recent mid-IR interferometric finding of polar-elongated geometry at a pc scale, together with a larger-scale polar outflow as spectrally resolved by the Hubble Space Telescope, would generally suggest a dusty, conical and hollow outflow being launched, presumably in the dust sublimation region. This might potentially lead to a polar-elongated morphology in the near-IR, as opposed to the results here. We discuss a possible scenario where an episodic, one-off anisotropic acceleration formed a polar-fast and equatorially slow velocity distribution, having led to an effectively flaring geometry as we observe.
0004-637X
Kishimoto, Makoto
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Anderson, Matthew
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Brummelaar, Theo ten
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Farrington, Christopher
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Antonucci, Robert
33172b9b-218b-404b-90b7-a150dcbbe42e
Hönig, Sebastian
be0bb8bc-bdac-4442-8edc-f735834f3917
Millour, Florentin
06eb1d8e-7235-4296-8b46-8fafb0668118
Tristram, Konrad R.W.
37fab926-5cfc-4c23-8f75-52fafaa518b6
Weigelt, Gerd
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Sturmann, Laszlo
060afa94-c0bf-4b91-815f-153252357436
Sturmann, Judit
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Schaefer, Gail
123cce01-d2b8-40d2-9545-8209e6df9a09
Scott, Nic
4b30f64c-30f8-4fb6-a121-5bd0ae1d7e59
Kishimoto, Makoto
ffd0231d-af4a-467e-b693-82905e0ca7f3
Anderson, Matthew
adff6875-f507-49e2-8b90-73b5ce43e295
Brummelaar, Theo ten
2d744ff4-37d6-4f43-b2a7-c08c03cccacc
Farrington, Christopher
34f1f9ba-a76d-4401-88f2-d4f28287a87c
Antonucci, Robert
33172b9b-218b-404b-90b7-a150dcbbe42e
Hönig, Sebastian
be0bb8bc-bdac-4442-8edc-f735834f3917
Millour, Florentin
06eb1d8e-7235-4296-8b46-8fafb0668118
Tristram, Konrad R.W.
37fab926-5cfc-4c23-8f75-52fafaa518b6
Weigelt, Gerd
bd0be979-0519-484f-b489-e3e44467bf57
Sturmann, Laszlo
060afa94-c0bf-4b91-815f-153252357436
Sturmann, Judit
51ddb4fb-8fec-4fe9-ade7-137cc9976487
Schaefer, Gail
123cce01-d2b8-40d2-9545-8209e6df9a09
Scott, Nic
4b30f64c-30f8-4fb6-a121-5bd0ae1d7e59

Kishimoto, Makoto, Anderson, Matthew, Brummelaar, Theo ten, Farrington, Christopher, Antonucci, Robert, Hönig, Sebastian, Millour, Florentin, Tristram, Konrad R.W., Weigelt, Gerd, Sturmann, Laszlo, Sturmann, Judit, Schaefer, Gail and Scott, Nic (2022) The dust sublimation region of the Type 1 AGN NGC 4151 at a hundred microarcsecond scale as resolved by the CHARA array interferometer. The Astrophysical Journal, 940 (1), [28]. (doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ac91c4).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The nuclear region of Type 1 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) has only been partially resolved so far in the near-infrared (IR), where we expect to see the dust sublimation region and the nucleus directly without obscuration. Here, we present the near-IR interferometric observation of the brightest Type 1 AGN NGC 4151 at long baselines of ∼250 m using the CHARA Array, reaching structures at hundred microarcsecond scales. The squared visibilities decrease down to as low as ∼0.25, definitely showing that the structure is resolved. Furthermore, combining with the previous visibility measurements at shorter baselines but at different position angles, we show that the structure is elongated perpendicular to the polar axis of the nucleus, as defined by optical polarization and a linear radio jet. A thin-ring fit gives a minor/major axis ratio of ∼0.7 at a radius ∼0.5 mas (∼0.03 pc). This is consistent with the case where the sublimating dust grains are distributed preferentially in the equatorial plane in a ring-like geometry, viewed at an inclination angle of ∼40°. The recent mid-IR interferometric finding of polar-elongated geometry at a pc scale, together with a larger-scale polar outflow as spectrally resolved by the Hubble Space Telescope, would generally suggest a dusty, conical and hollow outflow being launched, presumably in the dust sublimation region. This might potentially lead to a polar-elongated morphology in the near-IR, as opposed to the results here. We discuss a possible scenario where an episodic, one-off anisotropic acceleration formed a polar-fast and equatorially slow velocity distribution, having led to an effectively flaring geometry as we observe.

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Accepted/In Press date: 22 September 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 November 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490419
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490419
ISSN: 0004-637X
PURE UUID: e8bef1d6-e271-4f22-b998-2e9c7dc68504

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Date deposited: 24 May 2024 17:04
Last modified: 24 May 2024 17:10

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Contributors

Author: Makoto Kishimoto
Author: Matthew Anderson
Author: Theo ten Brummelaar
Author: Christopher Farrington
Author: Robert Antonucci
Author: Florentin Millour
Author: Konrad R.W. Tristram
Author: Gerd Weigelt
Author: Laszlo Sturmann
Author: Judit Sturmann
Author: Gail Schaefer
Author: Nic Scott

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