Mixed Morphology Pairs as a Breeding Ground for Active Nuclei
Mixed morphology pairs offer a simplification of the interaction equation that involves a gas-rich fast rotator paired with a gas-poor slow rotator. In past low resolution IRAS studies it was assumed that the bulk of the far infrared emission originated in the spiral component. However our ISO studi...
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Zusammenfassung: | Mixed morphology pairs offer a simplification of the interaction equation
that involves a gas-rich fast rotator paired with a gas-poor slow rotator. In
past low resolution IRAS studies it was assumed that the bulk of the far
infrared emission originated in the spiral component. However our ISO studies
revealed a surprising number of early-type components with significant IR
emission some of which turned out to show active nuclei. This motivated us to
look at the current statistics of active nuclei in mixed pairs using the
FIR-radio continuum correlation as a diagnostic. We find a clear excess of
early-type components with radio continuum emission and an active nucleus. We
suggest that they arise more often in mixed pairs via cross fueling of gas from
the spiral companion. This fuel is more efficiently channeled into the nucleus
of the slow rotating receptor. In a sample of 112 mixed-morphology pairs from
the Karachentsev catalog we find that about 25-30% of detected mixed pairs show
a displacement from the radio-FIR relation defined by normal star forming
galaxies. The latter objects show excess radio continuum emission while others
extend the relation to unusually high radio and FIR flux levels. Many of the
outliers/extreme emitters involve an early-type component with an active
nucleus. The paired E/S0 galaxies in the sample exhibit a significant excess
detection fraction and a marginal excess luminosity distribution compared to
isolated unpaired E/S0 galaxies. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0502459 |