Active galaxies have gone by many names: active galactic nuclei, quasars, QSOs, Seyfert galaxies, radio galaxies. Astronomers used to think these were all distinct types of objects, unified by the observation of large amounts of energy emerging from a compact region at the centre of the galaxy. These days, despite a great variety in observational characteristics, active galaxies’ engines are generally thought to be driven by a single mechanism, the accretion of material onto a supermassive central black hole.
In a paper published to the Arxiv last week, Kevin Schawinski and collaborators have used Galaxy Zoo classifications of local Universe galaxies to show that active elliptical galaxies are markedly different from those with a more disk-like or spiral shapes, adding morphology as an additional factor to consider in our model of active galaxies.


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