Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Index of Participants
- Preface
- I Evidence and Implications of Anisotropy in AGN
- Evidence for Anisotropy and Unification
- Any Evidence against Unified Schemes?
- Spectropolarimetry of Cygnus A
- Spectropolarimetery of the Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxy IRAS 110548–1131
- Are there Dusty Tori in Seyfert 2 Galaxies?
- Imaging Spectrophotometry of Extended-Emission Seyfert Galaxies
- Spectroscopy of the Extended Emission Line Regions in NGC 4388
- Evidence and Implications of Anisotropy in Seyfert Galaxies
- Collimated Radiation in NGC 4151
- A Dust Ring around the Nucleus of NGC 4151
- Evolution of Narrow Line Clouds
- Star Formation in NGC 5953
- Stellar Activity in the Seyfert Nucleus of NGC 1808
- Direct Evidence for Anisotropy: Radio Maps and their Relation to Optical Morphology
- The Radio-Optical Connection in AGN
- Knots in Extragalactic Radio Jets
- Radio Emission and the Nature of Compact Objects in AGN
- The Radio Properties of Hidden Seyfert 1's: Implications for Unified Models
- Anisotropic Optical Continuum Emission in Radio Quasars
- The UV Component in Distant Radio Galaxies
- A Connection between BL Lacertæ Objects and Flat-Spectrum Radio Quasars?
- The Difference between BL Lacs and QSOs
- The Evolutionary Unified Scheme and the θ-z Plane
- II Luminosity Functions and Continuum Energy Distributions
- III The Broad Line Region: Variability and Structure
- IV X-rays and Accretion Disks
- V Beams, Jets and Blazars
- VI Concluding Talk
Any Evidence against Unified Schemes?
from I - Evidence and Implications of Anisotropy in AGN
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Index of Participants
- Preface
- I Evidence and Implications of Anisotropy in AGN
- Evidence for Anisotropy and Unification
- Any Evidence against Unified Schemes?
- Spectropolarimetry of Cygnus A
- Spectropolarimetery of the Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxy IRAS 110548–1131
- Are there Dusty Tori in Seyfert 2 Galaxies?
- Imaging Spectrophotometry of Extended-Emission Seyfert Galaxies
- Spectroscopy of the Extended Emission Line Regions in NGC 4388
- Evidence and Implications of Anisotropy in Seyfert Galaxies
- Collimated Radiation in NGC 4151
- A Dust Ring around the Nucleus of NGC 4151
- Evolution of Narrow Line Clouds
- Star Formation in NGC 5953
- Stellar Activity in the Seyfert Nucleus of NGC 1808
- Direct Evidence for Anisotropy: Radio Maps and their Relation to Optical Morphology
- The Radio-Optical Connection in AGN
- Knots in Extragalactic Radio Jets
- Radio Emission and the Nature of Compact Objects in AGN
- The Radio Properties of Hidden Seyfert 1's: Implications for Unified Models
- Anisotropic Optical Continuum Emission in Radio Quasars
- The UV Component in Distant Radio Galaxies
- A Connection between BL Lacertæ Objects and Flat-Spectrum Radio Quasars?
- The Difference between BL Lacs and QSOs
- The Evolutionary Unified Scheme and the θ-z Plane
- II Luminosity Functions and Continuum Energy Distributions
- III The Broad Line Region: Variability and Structure
- IV X-rays and Accretion Disks
- V Beams, Jets and Blazars
- VI Concluding Talk
Summary
Abstract
Various observational tests of unified schemes for radio sources are reviewed critically. It is shown that, although some of the results might raise doubts, there exists no definitive evidence against these schemes.
Introduction
There is now considerable evidence to support the idea that the radiation from active galactic nuclei (AGN) is emitted anisotropically. For radio-loud objects much of the evidence has been gathered at radio wavelengths, and includes the measurements of superluminal motions in radio cores (e.g. Zensus 1988), the statistics of core and lobe dominated radio sources (e.g. Orr & Browne 1982), and the polarization asymmetry in the extended radio structures (e.g. Garrington et al. 1988, Laing 1988). For the radio-quiet objects the beautiful emission line images of radiation cones (e.g. Pogge 1989, Tadhunter & Tsvetanov 1989), and the detection of scattered broad lines within the extended regions (e.g. Miller et al. 1991), are also very strong evidence in favour of anisotropy.
These observations are comforting for the proponents of unified schemes who use anisotropy to explain the relationships between certain classes of AGN in terms of orientation effects. However, not all of the evidence is so positive, and in this paper I review some recent results which are less supportive of unified schemes.
Types of unified schemes
There is not just one unified scheme based on anisotropy/orientation effects, but several, and it is important to be clear about what we are discussing.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Nature of Compact Objects in Active Galactic NucleiProceedings of the 33rd Herstmonceux Conference, held in Cambridge, July 6-22, 1992, pp. 13 - 23Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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