ReveaLLAGN 0 First Look at JWST MIRI Data of Sombrero and NGC 1052

Open Access
Authors
  • K. Goold
  • A. Seth
  • M. Molina
  • D. Ohlson
  • J.C. Runnoe
  • T. Böker
  • T.A. Davis
  • A. Dumont
  • M. Eracleous
  • J.A. Fernández-Ontiveros
  • E. Gallo
  • A.D. Goulding
  • J.E. Greene
  • L.C. Ho
  • S.B. Markoff
  • N. Neumayer
  • R.M. Plotkin
  • A. Prieto
  • S. Satyapal
  • G. van de Ven
  • J.L. Walsh
  • F. Yuan
  • A. Feldmeier-Krause
  • Kayhan Gültekin
  • S. Hönig
  • A. Kirkpatrick
  • N. Lützgendorf
  • A.E. Reines
  • J. Strader
  • J.R. Trump
  • K.T. Voggel
Publication date 10-05-2024
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Article number 204
Volume | Issue number 966 | 2
Number of pages 15
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract

We present the first results from the Revealing Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei (ReveaLLAGN) survey, a JWST survey of seven nearby LLAGNs. We focus on two observations with the Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI)’s Medium-Resolution Spectrometer of the nuclei of NGC 1052 and Sombrero (NGC 4594/M104). We also compare these data to public JWST data of higher-luminosity AGNs, NGC 7319 and NGC 7469. JWST clearly separates the AGN spectrum from the galaxy light even in Sombrero, the faintest target in our survey; the AGN components have very red spectra. We find that the emission-line widths in both NGC 1052 and Sombrero increase with increasing ionization potential, with FWHM > 1000 km s−1 for lines with ionization potential ≳ 50 eV. These lines are also significantly blueshifted in both LLAGNs. The high-ionization-potential lines in NGC 7319 show neither broad widths nor significant blueshifts. Many of the lower-ionization-potential emission lines in Sombrero show significant blue wings extending >1000 km s−1. These features and the emission-line maps in both galaxies are consistent with outflows along the jet direction. Sombrero has the lowest-luminosity high-ionization-potential lines ([Ne v] and [O iv]) ever measured in the mid-infrared, but the relative strengths of these lines are consistent with higher-luminosity AGNs. On the other hand, the [Ne v] emission is much weaker relative to the [Ne iii] and [Ne ii] lines of higher-luminosity AGNs. These initial results show the great promise that JWST holds for identifying and studying the physical nature of LLAGNs.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad3065
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85192964310
Downloads
ReveaLLAGN 0 (Final published version)
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