45 research outputs found
The Nature of the Stable Soft X-ray Emissions in Several Types of Active Galactic Nuclei Observed by Suzaku
To constrain the origin of the soft X-ray excess phenomenon seen in many
active galactic nuclei, the intensity-correlated spectral analysis, developed
by Noda et al. (2011b) for Markarian 509, was applied to wide-band (0.5-45 keV)
Suzaku data of five representative objects with relatively weak reflection
signature. They are the typical bare-nucleus type 1 Seyfert Fairall 9, the
bright and typical type 1.5 Seyfert MCG-2-58-22, 3C382 which is one of the
X-ray brightest broad line radio galaxies, the typical Seyfert-like radio loud
quasar 4C+74.26, and the X-ray brightest radio quiet quasar MR2251-178. In all
of them, soft X-ray intensities in energies below 3 keV were tightly correlated
with that in 3-10 keV, but with significant positive offsets. These offsets,
when calculated in finer energy bands, define a stable soft component in 0.5-3
keV. In each object, this component successfully explained the soft excess
above a power-law fit. These components were interpreted in several alternative
ways, including a thermal Comptonization component which is independent of the
dominant power-law emission. This interpretation, considered physically most
reasonable, is discussed from a viewpoint of Multi-Zone Comptonization, which
was proposed for the black hole binary Cygnus X-1 (Makishima et al. 2008).Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, 7 table
Revisiting Permutation Symmetry for Merging Models between Different Datasets
Model merging is a new approach to creating a new model by combining the
weights of different trained models. Previous studies report that model merging
works well for models trained on a single dataset with different random seeds,
while model merging between different datasets is difficult. Merging knowledge
from different datasets has practical significance, but it has not been well
investigated. In this paper, we investigate the properties of merging models
between different datasets. Through theoretical and empirical analyses, we find
that the accuracy of the merged model decreases more significantly as the
datasets diverge more and that the different loss landscapes for each dataset
make model merging between different datasets difficult. We also show that
merged models require datasets for merging in order to achieve a high accuracy.
Furthermore, we show that condensed datasets created by dataset condensation
can be used as substitutes for the original datasets when merging models. We
conduct experiments for model merging between different datasets. When merging
between MNIST and Fashion- MNIST models, the accuracy significantly improves by
28% using the dataset and 25% using the condensed dataset compared with not
using the dataset.Comment: 18 pages; comments are welcom
Suzaku Results on the Obscured Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nucleus in NGC 4258
In 2006 June, the obscured low luminosity active galactic nucleus in the
nearby Seyfert 1.9 galaxy NGC 4258 was observed with Suzaku for ~ 100 ks.
Utilizing the XIS and the HXD, the nucleus emission was detected over 2 to 40
keV range, with an unabsorbed 2--10 keV luminosity of 8 x 10 40 erg / s, and
varied by a factor of ~ 2 during the observation. Its 2--40 keV spectrum is
reproduced by a single power law with photon index of ~ 2.0, absorbed by an
equivalent hydrogen column of ~ 1.0 x 10 23 cm2. The spectrum within 4' of the
nucleus required also a softer thin-thermal emission, as well as an
intermediate hardness component attributable to integrated point sources. A
weak neutral Fe-Kalpha florescence line was detected at an equivalent width of
~ 40 eV. The cold reflection component was not required by the data, with the
reflector solid angle Omega seen from the nucleus constrained as Omega / 2 pi <
0.3 assuming a general case of 60 deg inclination. The results suggest that the
cold reflecting material around the nucleus is localized along our line of
sight, rather than forming a thick torus.Comment: PASJ, NGC4258, Suzaku, 12 pages, 11 figure
Suzaku Discovery of a Hard Component Varying Independently of the Power-Law Emission in MCG-6-30-15
Focusing on hard X-ray variability, we reanalyzed Suzaku data of Type I
Seyfert galaxy MCG-6-30-15 obtained in 2006. Intensity-sorted spectroscopy and
a principal component analysis consistently revealed a very hard component that
varies independently of the dominant power-law emission. Although the exact
nature of this hard component is not yet identified, it can be modeled as a
power-law with a photon index ~2 affected by a partial covering absorption, or
as a thermal Comptonization emission with a relatively large optical depth.
When this component is included in the fitting model, the time-averaged 2.5-55
keV spectrum of MCG-6-30-15 can be reproduced successfully by invoking a mildly
broadened iron line with its emission region located at > 8 times the
gravitational radii from the central black hole, and a moderate reflection with
a covering fraction of ~3.4. This result implies that the solution of a highly
spinning black hole in MCG-6-30-15, obtained by Miniutti et al. (2007, PASJ,
59, S315) using the same Suzaku data, is a model dependent result
Accretion Geometry of the Low-Mass X-ray Binary Aquila X-1 in the Soft and Hard States
The neutron-star Low-Mass X-ray Binary Aquila X-1 was observed seven times in
total with the Suzaku X-ray observatory from September 28 to October 30 in
2007, in the decaying phase of an outburst. In order to constrain the
flux-dependent accretion geometry of this source over wider energy bands than
employed in most of previous works, the present study utilized two out of the
seven data sets. The 0.8-31 keV spectrum on September 28, taken with the XIS
and HXD-PIN for an exposure of 13.8 ks, shows an absorbed 0.8-31 keV flux of
erg s cm, together with typical
characteristics of the soft state of this type of objects. The spectrum was
successfully explained by an optically-thick disk emission plus a Comptonized
blackbody component. Although these results are in general agreement with
previous studies, the significance of a hard tail recently reported using the
same data was inconclusive in our analysis. The spectrum acquired on October 9
for an exposure of 19.7 ks was detected over a 0.8-100 keV band with the XIS,
HXD-PIN, and HXD-GSO, at an absorbed flux of erg s
cm (in 0.8-100 keV). It shows characteristics of the hard state, and was
successfully explained by the same two continuum components but with rather
different parameters including much stronger thermal Comptonization, of which
the seed photon source was identified with blackbody emission from the
neutron-star surface. As a result, the accretion flow in the hard state is
inferred to take a form of an optically-thick and geometrically-thin disk down
to a radius of km from the neutron star, and then turn into an
optically-thin nearly-spherical hot flow.Comment: PASJ in publish. 12 pages including 16 figure