MID-INFRARED PROPERTIES OF THE SWIFT BURST ALERT TELESCOPE ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI SAMPLE OF THE LOCAL UNIVERSE. I. EMISSION-LINE DIAGNOSTICS
/ Authors
K. Weaver, M. Meléndez, M. Meléndez, R. Mushotzky, R. Mushotzky, S. Kraemer, S. Kraemer, K. Engle, E. Malumuth, J. Tueller
and 6 more authors
C. Markwardt, C. Markwardt, C. Berghea, R. Dudik, L. Winter, L. Armus
/ Abstract
We compare mid-infrared emission-line properties from high-resolution Spitzer spectra of a hard X-ray (14–195 keV) selected sample of nearby (z < 0.05) active galactic nuclei (AGNs) detected by the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) aboard Swift. The luminosity distribution for the mid-infrared emission lines, [O iv] 25.89 μm, [Ne ii] 12.81 μm, [Ne iii] 15.56 μm, and [Ne v] 14.32/24.32 μm, and hard X-ray continuum show no differences between Seyfert 1 and Seyfert 2 populations; however, six newly discovered BAT AGNs are under-luminous in [O iv], most likely the result of dust extinction in the host galaxy. The overall tightness of the mid-infrared correlations and BAT fluxes and luminosities suggests that the emission lines primarily arise in gas ionized by the AGNs. We also compare the mid-infrared emission lines in the BAT AGNs with those from published studies of ULIRGs, Palomar-Green quasars, star-forming galaxies, and LINERs. We find that the BAT AGN sample falls into a distinctive region when comparing the [Ne iii]/[Ne ii] and the [O iv]/[Ne iii] ratios. These line ratios are lower in sources that have been previously classified in the mid-infrared/optical as AGNs than those found for the BAT AGNs, suggesting that, in our X-ray selected sample, the AGNs represent the main contribution to the observed line emission. These ratios represent a new emission line diagnostic for distinguishing between AGNs and star-forming galaxies.
Journal: The Astrophysical Journal