No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Are Extremely Luminous Far-Infrared Galaxies the Result of Merging Quasar Cores?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2016
Extract
Extremely Luminous far-infrared galaxies (ELFs) are a class of galaxy discovered independently by several groups. The class is characterised by a quasar-like total luminosity (1011 — 1013 L⊙) which is radiated almost entirely in the far-infrared, and it has been suggested that obscured quasar cores may be responsible for generating this luminosity. Here I demonstrate that ELFs appear in several guises which can be characterised by the number of quasar cores they contain (zero, one or two), and develop a unified model to account for these differences.
- Type
- V. Observations of Nuclear and Near-Nuclear Activity
- Information
- International Astronomical Union Colloquium , Volume 124: Paired and Interacting Galaxies , 1990 , pp. 387 - 392
- Copyright
- Copyright © NASA 1990