Quantifying the anisotropy in the infrared emission of powerful AGN

Abstract

We use restframe near- and mid-IR data of an isotropically selected sample of quasars and radio galaxies at 1.0 ≤ z ≤ 1.4, which have been published previously, to study the wavelength-dependent anisotropy of the IR emission. For that we build average SEDs of the quasar subsample (= type 1 AGN) and radio galaxies (= type 2 AGN) from ~1-17 μm and plot the ratio of both average samples. From 2 to 8 μm restframe wavelength the ratio gradually decreases from 20 to 2 with values around 3 in the 10μm silicate feature. Longward of 12μm the ratio decreases further and shows some high degree of isotropy at 15 μm (ratio ~1.4). The results are consistent with upper limits derived from the X-ray/mid-IR correlation of local Seyfert galaxies. We find that the anisotropy in our high-luminosity radio-loud sample is smaller than in radio-quiet lower-luminosity AGN which may be interpreted in the framework of a receding torus model with luminosity-dependent obscuration properties. It is also shown that the relatively small degree of anisotropy is consistent with clumpy torus models.

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