Bibcode
DOI
Prieto, M. Almudena; Acosta-Pulido, J. A.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 583, Issue 2, pp. 689-694.
Advertised on:
2
2003
Journal
Citations
4
Refereed citations
4
Description
The complete mid- to far-infrared continuum energy distribution
collected with the Infrared Space Observatory of the Seyfert 2 prototype
NGC 5252 is presented. ISOCAM images taken in the 3-15 μm show a
resolved central source that is consistent at all bands with a region of
about 1.3 kpc in size. Because of the lack of ongoing star formation in
the disk of the galaxy, this resolved emission is associated with either
dust heated in the nuclear active region or bremsstrahlung emission from
the nuclear and extended ionized gas. The size of the mid-IR emission
contrasts with the standard unification scenario envisaging a compact
dusty structure surrounding and hiding the active nucleus and the
broad-line region. The mid-IR data are complemented by ISOPHOT aperture
photometry in the 25-200 μm range. The overall IR spectral energy
distribution is dominated by a well-defined component peaking at ~100
μm, a characteristic temperature of T~=20 K, and an associated dust
mass of 2.5×107 Msolar, which greatly
dominates the total dust mass content of the galaxy. The heating
mechanism of this dust is probably the interstellar radiation field.
After the contribution of this cold dust component is subtracted, the
bulk of the residual emission is attributed to dust heated within the
nuclear environment. Its luminosity consistently accounts for the
reprocessing of the X-ray to UV emission derived for the nucleus of this
galaxy. The comparison of NGC 5252's spectral energy distribution with
current torus models favors large nuclear disk structure on the
kiloparsec scale.