On the Origin of the Ultraviolet Continuum Emission from the High-Redshift Radio Galaxy 3C 256

We report spectropolarimetric observations of the high-redshift ({ital z}=1.824) aligned radio galaxy 3C 256. Our observations confirm that the spatially extended UV continuum emission from this galaxy is polarized ({ital P}{sub {ital V}}{approx_equal}10.9{percent}{plus_minus}0.9{percent}) with the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Astrophysical Journal 1996-07, Vol.465 (1), p.157
Hauptverfasser: Dey, Arjun, Cimatti, Andrea, van Breugel, Wil, Antonucci, Robert, Spinrad, Hyron
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We report spectropolarimetric observations of the high-redshift ({ital z}=1.824) aligned radio galaxy 3C 256. Our observations confirm that the spatially extended UV continuum emission from this galaxy is polarized ({ital P}{sub {ital V}}{approx_equal}10.9{percent}{plus_minus}0.9{percent}) with the electric vector perpendicular to the aligned radio and optical major axes ({theta}{sub {ital V}}{approx_equal}48.0{degree}{plus_minus}2.4{degree}). This strongly suggests that a significant fraction of the rest frame UV continuum emission from the galaxy is not starlight, but is instead scattered light from a powerful active galactic nucleus that is hidden from our direct view. The narrow emission lines, including MgII, are unpolarized. The percentage polarization of the continuum emission and the polarization position angle are roughly constant as a function of wavelength. Although the present data do not permit us to discriminate between cool electrons and dust as the origin of the scattering, scattering by a population of hot ({ital T}{approx_gt}10{sup 7} K) electrons cannot be the dominant process, since such a population would overproduce X-ray emission. A large population of cooler electrons ({ital T}{approx_equal}10{sup 4} K) could be responsible for both the line emission and the scattered light, but would require that the dust-to-gas ratio in the scattering cones is 10{sup {minus}3} times smaller than that in our Galaxy and would imply that a large fraction of the baryonic mass in the galaxy is in the ionized component of its interstellar medium. Dust scattering is more efficient, but would result in detectable extinction of the emission-line spectrum unless the dust distribution is more highly clumped than the line emitting gas. Finally, we detect a strong ({ital W}{sup rest}{sub {lambda}}{approx_equal}12 A) broad (FWHM{approx_equal}6500 kms{sup {minus}1}) absorption line centered at {lambda}{sub rest}{approx_equal}1477 A. (Abstract Truncated)
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.1086/177409