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A&A 392, 53-82 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020874
Radio sources in low-luminosity active galactic nuclei
III. "AGNs" in a distance-limited sample of "LLAGNs"
N. M. Nagar1, H. Falcke2, A. S. Wilson3 and J. S. Ulvestad41 Arcetri Observatory, Largo E. Fermi 5, Florence 50125, Italy
2 Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie, Auf dem Hügel 69, 53121 Bonn, Germany
e-mail: hfalcke@mpifr-bonn.mpg.de
3 Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA Adjunct Astronomer, Space Telescope Science Institute, 3700 San Martin Drive, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA
e-mail: wilson@astro.umd.edu
4 National Radio Astronomy Observatory, PO Box 0, Socorro, NM 87801, USA
e-mail: julvesta@nrao.edu
(Received 23 January (2002) / Accepted 6 June (2002))
Abstract
This paper presents the results of a high resolution radio imaging survey
of all known (96) low-luminosity active galactic nuclei (LLAGNs) at
Mpc.
We first report new 2 cm (150 mas resolution using the VLA) and 6 cm
(2 mas resolution using the VLBA)
radio observations of the previously unobserved nuclei in our samples and
then present results on the complete survey.
We find that almost half of all LINERs and low-luminosity Seyferts have
flat-spectrum radio cores when observed at 150 mas resolution.
Higher (2 mas) resolution observations of a flux-limited subsample have
provided a 100% (16 of 16) detection rate of pc-scale radio cores, with
implied brightness temperatures
K. The five LLAGNs with the
highest core radio fluxes also have pc-scale "jets".
Compact radio cores are almost exclusively found in massive ellipticals
and in type 1 nuclei (i.e. nuclei with broad H
emission).
Only a few "transition" nuclei have compact radio cores; those detected
in the radio have optical emission-line diagnostic ratios close to those of
LINERs/Seyferts. This indicates that some transition nuclei are truly
composite Seyfert/LINER+
region nuclei, with the radio core power
depending on the strength of the former component.
The core radio power is correlated with the nuclear optical "broad"
H
luminosity, the nuclear optical "narrow" emission-line
luminosity and width, and with the galaxy luminosity.
In these correlations LLAGNs fall close to the low-luminosity
extrapolations of more powerful AGNs.
The scalings suggest that many of the radio-non-detected LLAGNs are simply
lower power versions of the radio-detected LLAGNs.
The ratio of core radio power to nuclear optical emission-line luminosity
increases with increasing bulge luminosity for all LLAGNs. Also, there is evidence
that the luminosity of the disk component of the galaxy is correlated with the
nuclear emission-line luminosity (but not the core radio power).
About half of all LLAGNs with multiple epoch data show significant inter-year
radio variability.
Investigation of a sample of ~150 nearby bright galaxies, most of them
LLAGNs, shows that the nuclear (
150 mas size) radio power is strongly
correlated with both the black hole mass and the galaxy bulge luminosity;
linear regression fits to all ~150 galaxies give:
(
0.16) log
+ 8.77 and
(
0.21
(bulge
) -0.17.
Low accretion rates (
10-2-10-3 of the Eddington rate) are implied
in both advection- and jet-type models.
In brief, all evidence points towards the presence of accreting massive black
holes in a large fraction, perhaps all, of LLAGNs, with the nuclear radio
emission originating in either the accretion inflow onto the massive black hole
or from jets launched by this black hole-accretion disk system.
Key words: accretion, accretion disks -- galaxies: active -- galaxies: jets -- galaxies: nuclei -- radio continuum: galaxies -- surveys
Offprint request: N. M. Nagar, neil@arcetri.astro.it
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2002
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