-
Articles citing this article
- Same authors
-
Related articles
- Recommend this article
- Download citation
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me when this article is corrected
|
A&A 423, 549-558 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20047067
Organic matter in Seyfert 2 nuclei: Comparison with our Galactic center lines of sight
E. Dartois1, O. Marco2, G. M. Muñoz-Caro1, K. Brooks3, 2, D. Deboffle1 and L. d'Hendecourt11 Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale, UMR-8617, Université Paris-Sud, Bâtiment 121, 91405 Orsay, France
e-mail: emmanuel.dartois@ias.u-psud.fr
2 European Southern Observatory, Alonso de Cordova 3107, Vitacura, Santiago, Chile
e-mail: o.marco@eso.org
3 Departamento de Astronomía, Universidad de Chile, Casilla 36-D, Santiago, Chile
(Received 13 January 2004 / Accepted 19 April 2004 )
Abstract
We present ESO - Very Large Telescope and ESA - Infrared Space
Observatory 3 to 4
m spectra of Seyfert 2 nuclei as compared to
our galactic center lines of sight. The diffuse interstellar medium
probed in both environments displays the characteristic 3.4
m
aliphatic CH stretch absorptions of refractory carbonaceous
material. The profile of this absorption feature is similar in all
sources, indicating the CH
2/CH
3 ratios of the carbon chains
present in the refractory components of the grains are the same in
Seyfert 2 inner regions. At longer wavelengths the circumstellar
contamination of most of the galactic lines of sight precludes the
identification of other absorption bands arising from the groups
constitutive of the aliphatics seen at 3.4
m. The clearer
continuum produced by the Seyfert 2 nuclei represents promising lines
of sight to constrain the existence or absence of strongly infrared
active chemical groups such as the carbonyl one, important to understand
the role of oxygen insertion in interstellar grains. The Spitzer Space
Telescope spectrometer will soon allow one to investigate the
importance of aliphatics on a much larger extragalactic sample.
Key words: ISM: dust, extinction -- ISM: evolution -- galaxies: active -- galaxies: ISM
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2004
| What is OpenURL? |

Document
BibSonomy
CiteUlike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
