NuSTAR Non-detection of a Faint Active Galactic Nucleus in an Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxy with Kpc-scale Fast Wind

Kawamuro, Taiki; Toba, Yoshiki; Noda, Hirofumi; Chen, Xiaoyang; Akiyama, Masayuki; Kawaguchi, Toshihiro; Ichikawa, Kohei

Japan, Chile, Taiwan

Abstract

Large-scale outflows are generally considered to be possible evidence that active galactic nuclei (AGNs) can severely affect their host galaxies. Recently, an ultraluminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) at z = 0.49, AKARI J0916248+073034, was found to have a galaxy-scale [O III] λ5007 outflow with one of the highest energy-ejection rates at z < 1.6. However, the central AGN activity estimated from its torus mid-infrared (MIR) radiation is weak relative to the luminous [O III] emission. In this work we report the first NuSTAR hard X-ray follow-up of this ULIRG to constrain its current AGN luminosity. The intrinsic 2-10 keV luminosity shows a 90% upper limit of 3.0 × 1043 erg s-1 assuming Compton-thick obscuration (NH = 1.5 × 1024 cm-2), which is only 3.6% of the luminosity expected from the extinction-corrected [O III] luminosity. Using the NuSTAR observation, we successfully identify that this ULIRG has a very extreme case of X-ray deficit among local ULIRGs. A possible scenario to explain the drastic decline in both the corona (X-ray) and torus (MIR) is that the primary radiation from the AGN accretion disk is currently in a fading status, as a consequence of a powerful nuclear wind suggested by powerful ionized outflow in a galaxy scale.

2020 The Astrophysical Journal
AKARI 8