Unified Schemes for Radio-Loud Active Galactic Nuclei
C. Megan Urry, STScI, and
Paolo Padovani , II Universita' di Roma (now at
ESO)
Original Version (ADS link):
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific,
1995, 107, 803. Invited Review Paper.
Text copyright (c) 1995: Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Abstract
The appearance of active galactic nuclei (AGN) depends so strongly on
orientation that our current classification schemes are dominated by random
pointing directions instead of more interesting physical properties. Light
from the centers of many AGN is obscured by optically thick circumnuclear
matter, particularly at optical and ultraviolet wavelengths. In radio-loud
AGN, bipolar jets emanating from the nucleus emit radio through gamma-ray
light that is relativistically beamed along the jet axes. Understanding the
origin and magnitude of radiation anisotropies in AGN allows us to unify
different classes of AGN; that is, to identify each single, underlying AGN
type that gives rise to different classes through different orientations.
This review describes the unification of radio-loud AGN, which include radio
galaxies, quasars, and blazars. We describe the classification and general
properties of AGN. We summarize the evidence for anisotropic emission caused
by circumnuclear obscuration and relativistic beaming. We outline the two most
plausible unified schemes for radio-loud AGN, one linking the high-luminosity
sources (quasars and luminous radio galaxies) and one the low-luminosity
sources (BL~Lac objects and less luminous radio galaxies). Using the
formalism appropriate to samples biased by relativistic beaming, we show the
population statistics for two schemes are in accordance with available data.
We analyze the possible connections between low- and high-luminosity
radio-loud AGN and conclude they probably are powered by similar physical
processes, at least within the relativistic jet. We review potential
difficulties with unification and conclude that none currently constitutes a
serious problem. We discuss likely complications to unified schemes that are
suggested by realistic physical considerations; these will be important to
consider when more comprehensive data for larger complete samples become
available. We conclude with a list of the ten questions we believe are the
most pressing in this field.
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