New evidence for the dusty wind model: Polar dust and a hot core in the type-1 Seyfert ESO\,323-G77

Abstract

Infrared interferometry of Seyfert galaxies has revealed that their warm (300-400\,K) dust emission originates primarily from polar regions instead of from an equatorial dust torus as predicted by the classic AGN unification scheme. We present new data for the type 1.2 object ESO\,323-G77 obtained with the MID-infrared interferometric Instrument (MIDI) and a new detailed morphological study of its warm dust. The partially resolved emission on scales between 5 and 50\,mas (1.6-16\,pc) is decomposed into a resolved and an unresolved source. Approximately 65\% of the correlated flux between 8 and 13\,μm is unresolved at all available baseline lengths. The remaining 35\% is partially resolved and shows angular structure. From geometric modelling we find that the emission is elongated along a position angle of 15514 with an axis ratio (major/minor) of 2.90.3. Because the system axis is oriented in position angle 1742, we conclude that the dust emission of this object is also polar extended. A CAT3D-WIND radiative transfer model of a dusty disk and a dusty wind with a half opening angle of 30 can reproduce both the interferometric data and the SED, while a classical torus model is unable to fit the interferometric data. We interpret this as further evidence that a polar dust component is required even for low-inclination type 1 sources.

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