Abstract

In a recent review paper we summarized the current status of unification of radio-loud AGN (Urry & Padovani 1995 PASP 107, 803), connecting high-luminosity (FR II) radio galaxies with quasars, and low-luminosity (FR I) radio galaxies with BL Lac objects. Unified schemes are motivated by the knowledge that AGN appearance depends strongly on orientation (Fig. 1): optical/UV light from the centers of many AGN is obscured by circumnuclear matter, and in radio-loud AGN, bipolar relativistic jets beam light along the jet axes. Understanding these radiation anisotropics allows us to unify apparently distinct classes of AGN that differ primarily because of orientation.Our review described the classification and general properties of AGN and summarized the evidence for anisotropic emission caused by circumnuclear obscuration and relativistic beaming. We outlined the evidence, both observed isotropic properties and statistical arguments, for connecting FR IIs with quasars and FR Is with BL Lacs. The population statistics (with beaming) are in accordance with available data and suggest γ ≃ 5 for low-luminosity AGN and γ ≃ 10 for high-luminosity AGN. The distinctions between X-ray-selected and radio-selected BL Lac objects, and between BL Lacs and flat-spectrum variable quasars, still not understood, provide clues to the underlying physics of blazars. Our review discussed several possible problems and complications, and concluded with a list of the ten questions we believe are the most pressing in this field.

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