306 research outputs found
Chandra detection of a parsec scale wind in the Broad Line Radio Galaxy 3C 382
We present unambiguous evidence for a parsec scale wind in the Broad-Line
Radio Galaxy (BLRG) 3C 382, the first radio-loud AGN, with , whereby an outflow has been measured with
X-ray grating spectroscopy. A 118 ks Chandra grating (HETG) observation of 3C
382 has revealed the presence of several high ionization absorption lines in
the soft X-ray band, from Fe, Ne, Mg and Si. The absorption lines are
blue-shifted with respect to the systemic velocity of 3C 382 by -840\pm60 km/s
and are resolved by Chandra with a velocity width of 340\pm70 km/s. The outflow
appears to originate from a single zone of gas of column density cm and ionization parameter . From
the above measurements we calculate that the outflow is observed on parsec
scales, within the likely range from 10-1000 pc, i.e., consistent with an
origin in the Narrow Line Region.Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letter
Evidence for a circum-nuclear and ionised absorber in the X-ray obscured BroadLine Radio Galaxy 3C 445
Here we present the results of a Suzaku observation of the Broad Line Radio
Galaxy 3C 445. We confirm the results obtained with the previous X-ray
observations which unveiled the presence of several soft X-ray emission lines
and an overall X-ray emission which strongly resembles a typical Seyfert 2
despite of the optical classification as an unobscured AGN. The broad band
spectrum allowed us to measure for the first time the amount of reflection
(R~0.9) which together with the relatively strong neutral Fe Kalpha emission
line (EW ~ 100 eV) strongly supports a scenario where a Compton-thick mirror is
present. The primary X-ray continuum is strongly obscured by an absorber with a
column density of NH =2-3 x10^{23} cm^{-2}. Two possible scenarios are proposed
for the absorber: a neutral partial covering or a mildly ionised absorber with
an ionisation parameter log\xi ~ 1.0 erg cm s^{-1}. A comparison with the past
and more recent X-ray observations of 3C 445 performed with XMM-Newton and
Chandra is presented, which provided tentative evidence that the ionised and
outflowing absorber varied. We argue that the absorber is probably associated
with an equatorial disk-wind located within the parsec scale molecular torus.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS; 13 pages, 6 figures, 4 table
Arp 299: a second merging system with two active nuclei?
Recent BeppoSAX observations of Arp 299, a powerful far-IR merging starburst system composed of IC 694 and NGC 3690, clearly unveiled for the first time in this system the presence of a strongly absorbed active galactic nucleus (AGN). However the system was not spatially resolved by BeppoSAX. Here we present the analysis of archival Chandra and (for the first time) XMM-Newton observations, which allow us to disentangle the X-ray emission of the two galaxies. The detection of a strong 6.4 keV line in NGC 3690 clearly demonstrates the existence of an AGN in this galaxy, while the presence of a strong 6.7 keV Fe-Kalpha line in the spectrum of IC 694 suggests that also this nucleus might harbor an AGN. This would be the second discovery of two AGNs in a merging system after NGC 6240
Origin of the X-Ray Background and AGN Unification: New Perspectives
We critically review the basic assumptions of the standard model for the
synthesis of the XRB in the light of new data from ultradeep surveys by Chandra
and XMM, resolving major parts of it. Important constraints come in particular
from the observed z-distributions of faint hard X-ray sources -- showing large
excesses at redshifts (z~0.8) much lower than expected by the synthesis models
-- and from their X/optical/IR SEDs combined with the IR counts of type-II
AGNs. Our analysis, although supporting the general scheme which interprets the
XRB as due to absorbed AGNs with broad N_H distributions, requires major
revision of the other postulate of the XRB synthesis models: the AGN
unification. We argue that the unification scheme based on a simple orientation
effect fails at high redshifts, where galaxy activity is induced by strong
interactions and mergers among gas-rich systems. This helps explaining the
observational evidence that type-I and II AGNs follow different evolutionary
patterns, with type-I quasars providing a very biased trace of this activity.
Combined deep X-ray and IR surveys consistently find that the universe has
experienced a violent phase of galaxy activity around z~1, probably related
with the assembly of massive galaxies, involving both SF and obscured AGN
fueling. Roughly 10 to 20% of this activity has involved substantial AGN
emission, this fraction likely reflecting the AGN/starburst duty cycle during
the activation phase.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in MNRA
X-ray variability analysis of a large series of XMM-Newton + NuSTAR observations of NGC 3227
We present a series of X-ray variability results from a long XMM-Newton +
NuSTAR campaign on the bright, variable AGN NGC 3227. We present an analysis of
the lightcurves, showing that the source displays typically
softer-when-brighter behaviour, although also undergoes significant spectral
hardening during one observation which we interpret as due to an occultation
event by a cloud of absorbing gas. We spectrally decompose the data and show
that the bulk of the variability is continuum-driven and, through rms
variability analysis, strongly enhanced in the soft band. We show that the
source largely conforms to linear rms-flux behaviour and we compute X-ray power
spectra, detecting moderate evidence for a bend in the power spectrum,
consistent with existing scaling relations. Additionally, we compute X-ray
Fourier time lags using both the XMM-Newton and - through maximum-likelihood
methods - NuSTAR data, revealing a strong low-frequency hard lag and evidence
for a soft lag at higher frequencies, which we discuss in terms of
reverberation models.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 19 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables;
minor typographical errors corrected and reference list update
2-10 keV luminosity of high-mass binaries as a gauge of ongoing star-formation rate
Based on recent work on spectral decomposition of the emission of
star-forming galaxies, we assess whether the integrated 2-10 keV emission from
high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs), L_{2-10}^{HMXB}, can be used as a reliable
estimator of ongoing star formation rate (SFR). Using a sample of 46 local (z <
0.1) star forming galaxies, and spectral modeling of ASCA, BeppoSAX, and
XMM-Newton data, we demonstrate the existence of a linear SFR-L_{2-10}^{HMXB}
relation which holds over ~5 decades in X-ray luminosity and SFR. The total
2-10 keV luminosity is not a precise SFR indicator because at low SFR (i.e., in
normal and moderately-starbursting galaxies) it is substantially affected by
the emission of low-mass X-ray binaries, which do not trace the current SFR due
to their long evolution lifetimes, while at very high SFR (i.e., for very
luminous FIR-selected galaxies) it is frequently affected by the presence of
strongly obscured AGNs. The availability of purely SB-powered galaxies - whose
2-10 keV emission is mainly due to HMXBs - allows us to properly calibrate the
SFR-L_{2-10}^{HMXB} relation. The SFR-L_{2-10}^{HMXB} relation holds also for
distant (z ~ 1) galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field North sample, for which we
lack spectral information, but whose SFR can be estimated from deep radio data.
If confirmed by more detailed observations, it may be possible to use the
deduced relation to identify distant galaxies that are X-ray overluminous for
their (independently estimated) SFR, and are therefore likely to hide strongly
absorbed AGNs.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, in press (15 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables
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