GeminiFocus April 2017 | Page 14

Peter Michaud Science Highlights Figure 1. Minimum ionizing luminosity of extended AGN-ionized clouds along the projected radius. These Hubble Space Telescope data show a luminosity drop in the last 20,000 years before our direct view of the nucleus, characteristic for all AGN of this study. Gemini follow-up on fading active galactic nuclei (AGN) help confirm that they are dynamically different from radio-loud AGN. Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph data assist astronomers in seeing for the first time clear signatures of rocky planet assembly via large asteroids in a dwarf binary system. And Gemini Planet Imager data reveal that exoplanet β Pictoris b appears to have an atmosphere similar to those found around low-surface-gravity brown dwarfs. New Insights on Fading Active Galactic Nuclei in Collaboration with Galaxy Zoo William C. Keel (University of Alabama) and collaborators use Hα narrowband filters on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), in conjunction with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph integral field unit (GMOS IFU) on the Gemini North telescope on Maunakea, to observe a set of fading active galactic nuclei (AGN). These AGN were first identified/classified as part of the Galaxy Zoo project — an online citizen science project in which the public help researchers deal with floods of incoming data aimed at classifying galaxies. This work focuses on nine AGN with ionized gas clouds extending more than 10 kiloparsecs from them. Because these clouds span galaxy scales (or even larger) they can implicitly tell us about the lu- minosity history of the AGN. Based on this research, the nine observed AGN appear to have experienced a significant reduction in luminosity within 20,000 years or less (Figure 1). 12 GeminiFocus April 2017