4.7 Article

The survey of nearby nuclei with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph: Emission-line nuclei at Hubble Space Telescope resolution

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 654, Issue 1, Pages 125-137

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/509059

Keywords

galaxies : active; galaxies : nuclei; Galaxy : center; Galaxy : nucleus

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We present results from a program of optical spectroscopy for 23 nearby galaxies with emission-line nuclei. This investigation takes advantage of the spatial resolution of the Hubble Space Telescope to study the structure and energetics of the central similar to 10-20 pc, and the resulting data have value for quantifying central black hole masses, star formation histories, and nebular properties. This paper provides a description of the experimental design, and new findings from the study of emission lines. The sample targets span a range of nebular spectroscopic class, from H II to Seyfert nuclei. This data set and the resulting measurements are unique in terms of the sample size, the range of nebular class, and the investigation of physical scales extending down to parsecs. The line ratios indicative of nebular ionization show only modest variations over order-of-magnitude differences in radius, and demonstrate in a systematic way that geometrical dilution of the radiation field from a central source cannot be assumed as a primary driver of ionization structure. Comparisons between large- and small-aperture measurements for the H II/LINER transition objects provide a new test that challenges conventional wisdom concerning the composite nature of these systems. We also list a number of other quantitative results that are of interest for understanding galaxy nuclei, including ( 1) the spatial distribution/degree of concentration of H alpha emission as a function of nebular type; ( 2) the radial variation in electron density as a function of nebular type; and ( 3) quantitative broad H alpha estimates obtained at a second epoch for these low-luminosity nuclei. The resulting measurements provide a new basis for comparing the nuclei of other galaxies with that of the Milky Way. We find that the Galactic center is representative across a wide span of properties as a low-luminosity emission-line nucleus.

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