Spatially resolved circumnuclear coronal [ Fe\,VII]\,λ6087 emission in nearby Seyfert galaxies

Abstract

Coronal lines are forbidden emission lines with a ionisation potential 100\, eV. They are linked to energetic phenomena triggered by AGNs in the circumnuclear medium. We present the first high-angular-resolution integral-field analysis of the [ Fe\,VII]\,λ6087 coronal line in a sample of four nearby low-inclination Seyfert galaxies (three of Type 1 and one of Type 2). The data were obtained with the adaptive-optics-assisted mode of MUSE, and have angular resolutions of 0.06-0.18\, arcsec, allowing us to probe regions down to a few tens of parsecs in size. In three of the objects, we find a resolved coronal emission in a relatively compact configuration (200\, pc in radius). The coronal emission is smooth and symmetric with respect to the centre of the galaxy, except for one object where an off-nucleus clump of emission is detected. Through the use of spectroastrometry we find that the [ Fe\,VII] outflow of the Type 2 AGN host has a redshifted and a blueshifted component whose centroids are separated by 20\, pc. We interpret this as evidence that some of the coronal emission comes from the inner part of a biconic outflow, also seen in low-ionisation lines. Similar [ Fe\,VII] properties are found in two of the Type 1 AGN hosts, but with a much smaller separation between the centroids of the lobes of the outflow (<7\, pc). This could be due to the foreshortening of the axis of the bicone in Type 1 objects. We also studied the spectrum of the unresolved nuclear source and found that in three out of four galaxies a fraction of at least 60\% of the [Fe VII] emission has kinematics similar to those of [ O\,III]. We conclude that part of the coronal emission within the inner few tens of parsecs is co-spatial and shares kinematics with the outflows as traced by lower-ionisation lines.

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