Nature, Vol.385, No.6618, 700-702, 1997
Visibility of Scattered Broad-Line Emission in Seyfert 2 Galaxies
Active galaxies are thought to be powered by the accretion of gas onto a central massive black hole, Seyfert galaxies-the most common examples of nearby active galaxies-are separated into two classes based on their emission Sine widths’, Seyfert 1 galaxies exhibit broad emission lines that are attributed to ionized gas within 1 pc of the black hole, whereas the spectra of Seyfert 2 galaxies show only narrower emission lines, believed to originate from a much larger region around the core. The ’unified model’ for Seyfert galaxies attributes these differences to the presence of a dusty torus of dense molecular gas surrounding the black hole(2) : the orientation of Seyfert 2 galaxies is such that the broad-line region is obscured, Tile detection(3) in the polarization spectrum of broad emission lines scattered into our line of sight by free electrons in NGC1068 (the prototypical Seyfert 2 galaxy) and other Seyfert 2 galaxies(4-8) has strengthened this view, but all of these galaxies were subject to selection biases. Here we report the results of a systematic search for polarized broad emission lines in a well defined sample of Seyfert 2 galaxies. Mie show that the ability to detect scattered broad emission lines is related to the far-infrared colours, in the manner predicted by the unified model.