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A&A 433, 841-854 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20042072
Probing the nuclear obscuration in radio-galaxies with near infrared imaging
D. Marchesini1, A. Capetti2 and A. Celotti11 SISSA/ISAS, via Beirut 2-4, 34014 Trieste, Italy
e-mail: danilom@astro.yale.edu
2 INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Torino, Strada Osservatorio 20, 10025 Pino Torinese, Italy
(Received 27 September 2004 / Accepted 8 December 2004)
Abstract
We present the first near-infrared (
-band)
homogeneous observations of a complete sub-sample of the 3CR radio
catalogue comprising all High Excitation Galaxies (HEGs) at z <0.3.
After showing that the surface brightness decomposition technique to
measure central point-like sources is affected by significant
uncertainties for the objects in the studied sample, we present a
new, more accurate method based on the
color profile.
Via this method we find a substantial nuclear
-band excess in all
but two HEGs - most likely directly associated with their nuclear
emission - and we measure the corresponding 2.12
m nuclear
luminosities. Within the frame-work of the unification scheme for
radio-loud active galactic nuclei, it appears that obscuration alone
is not able to account for the different nuclear properties of the
majority of the HEGs and Broad Line Radio Galaxies (BLRGs), and also
scattering of the (optically) hidden nuclear light from a compact
region must be invoked. More precisely, for ~70% of the HEGs
the observed point-like optical emission is dominated by the
scattered component, while in the
-band both scattered
and direct light passing through the torus contribute to the
observed nuclear luminosity. The estimated fraction of scattered
light ranges from a few tenths to a few percent, while the torus
extinction is between
mag with only a few
exceptions with lower obscuration.
Key words: galaxies: active -- galaxies: nuclei -- galaxies: photometry -- infrared: galaxies -- galaxies: quasars: general
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2005
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