AGN luminosity and stellar age -- two missing ingredients for AGN unification as seen with iPTF supernovae
Abstract
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are extremely powerful cosmic objects, driven by accretion of hot gas upon super-massive black holes. The zoo of AGN classes are divided into two major groups, with Type-1 AGN displaying broad Balmer emission lines and Type-2 narrow ones. For a long time it was believed that a Type-2 AGN is a Type-1 AGN viewed through a dusty kiloparsec-size torus, but an emerging body of observations suggests more than just the viewing angle matters. Here we report significant differences in supernova counts and classes in the first study to date of supernovae near Type-1 and Type-2 AGN host galaxies, using data from the intermediate Palomar Transient Factory, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 and Galaxy Zoo. We detect many more supernovae in Type-2 AGN hosts (size of effect 5.1σ) compared to Type-1 hosts, which shows that the two classes of AGN are located inside host galaxies with different properties. In addition, Type-1 and Type-2 AGN that are dominated by star formation according to WISE colours mW1 - mW2 < 0.5 and are matched in 22 μm absolute magnitude differ by a factor of ten in L[OIII]λ5007 luminosity, suggesting that when residing in similar type of host galaxies Type-1 AGN are much more luminous. Our results demonstrate two more factors that play an important role in completing the current picture: the age of stellar populations and the AGN luminosity. This has immediate consequences for understanding the many AGN classes and galaxy evolution.
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