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Do Starburst galaxies contain buried AGN?

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Do Starburst galaxies contain buried AGN?

We have observed 210 Seyfert galaxies and 81 starburst galaxies with the 275-km Parkes - Tidbinbilla Interferometer (PTI) at 2.3 GHz (Norris et al., 1988). This has resulted in a high-resolution survey with uniform sensitivity ( > 2 mJy) and resolution (0.1 arcsec, corresponding to 20 - 200 pc over the redshift range of the sample). Thus the PTI is sensitive to structures with brightness temperatures greater than tex2html_wrap_inline53 K, and so can detect radio emission from compact nuclear objects associated with the AGN, but is blind to extended star-formation activity.

In Seyferts we typically detect about 41 % of the objects observed (e.g. Roy et al. 1994) but in starburst galaxies (Norris & Roy 1996) we detect only 5%. This result shows a significant difference between the two samples, and shows clearly that, although a few starburst galaxies may contain a buried AGN, the majority do not. There is a tendency for these buried AGN to occur in high luminosity objects, such as those classified as ultra-luminous infrared galaxies. Lonsdale et al. (1993) carried out a similar survey on 15 ultra-luminous starburst galaxies and detected eight of them. The difference between this result and that of Norris & Roy may be attributed partly to the fact that the Lonsdale sample were all high-luminosity objects, although the Norris and Roy result demonstrates that even at these high luminosities, some ultra-luminous galaxies are still powered by starburst activity.



Ray Norris
Mon Sep 23 15:17:34 EST 1996
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