I.M. van Bemmel 1 P.D. Barthel 2
1 European Southern Observatory, Karl-Schwarzschild-Str. 2, D-85748 Garching
2 Kapteyn Institute for Astronomy, PO Box 800, NL-9700 AV Groningen
With IRAS it was already observed that radio-loud quasars (QSRs) are in general
brighter at 60 and 100
than radio galaxies (RGs) (Heckman et al.,
1994).
This is in contradiction with the expectation within the unified model for
radio-loud AGN (Barthel, 1989; Hes et al., 1995), postulating a dusty torus
shielding the central engine from direct view in the RGs. Models for thermal
far-infrared (FIR) torus emission suggest that it is isotropic at wavelengths
longward of 60
(Pier & Krolik, 1992; Granato & Danese, 1994). It
was
suggested that beamed non-thermal emission could be responsible for the IR
excess in QSRs (Hoekstra et al., 1997), but an investigation of three IRAS
detected double-lobed QSRs showed that beaming alone could not cause such an
excess (van Bemmel et al., 1998).
To address the anisotropy in more detail, an ISO project was conceived,
studying six matched pairs of intermediate redshift double-lobed QSRs and
RGs, taken from the 3C-catalog. Four of these pairs were actually observed
with ISO at 60, 90 (C100) and 160 um (C200) in raster mode. Nearly
simultaneous observations at four cm-mm bands with the VLA were conducted
to permit an assessment of possible non-thermal FIR emission in the QSRs.
These measurements were supplemented with JCMT-SCUBA observations at 850
and 450 .
All four QSRs are detected at all three ISO wavelengths, while the RGs only
have a 25% detection rate. The classes differ markedly, even at 160 .
After subtraction of non-thermal flux, the QSRs are brighter at 160
in
three cases, while in all cases the QSRs are brighter at 60 and 90
.
Current
torus models predict isotropy at these wavelengths. The origin of this
FIR-excess in the QSR class is difficult to understand within the framework
of the unification theory. One viable explanation may be the occurrence of
beamed non-thermal flares, as observed in blazars (Brown et al., 1989).