2,098 research outputs found

    Spectral variability in Cygnus X-3

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    We model the broad-band X-ray spectrum of Cyg X-3 in all states displayed by this source as observed by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. From our models, we derive for the first time unabsorbed spectral shapes and luminosities for the full range of spectral states. We interpret the unabsorbed spectra in terms of Comptonization by a hybrid electron distribution and strong Compton reflection. We study the spectral evolution and compare with other black hole as well as neutron star sources. We show that a neutron star accretor is not consistent with the spectral evolution as a function of Ledd and especially not with the transition to a hard state. Our results point to the compact object in Cyg X-3 being a massive, ~30 Msun black hole.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    A fundamental plane of black hole activity

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    We examine the disc--jet connection in stellar mass and supermassive black holes by investigating the properties of their compact emission in the X-ray and radio bands. We compile a sample of ~100 active galactic nuclei with measured mass, 5 GHz core emission, and 2-10 keV luminosity, together with 8 galactic black holes with a total of ~50 simultaneous observations in the radio and X-ray bands. Using this sample, we study the correlations between the radio (L_{R}) and the X-ray (L_{X}) luminosity and the black hole mass (M). We find that the radio luminosity is correlated with {\em both} M and L_{X}, at a highly significant level. In particular, we show that the sources define a ``fundamental plane'' in the three-dimensional (log L_{R},log L_{X},log M) space, given by log L_{R}=(0.60^{+0.11}_{-0.11}) log L_{X} +(0.78^{+0.11}_{-0.09}) log M + 7.33^{+4.05}_{-4.07}, with a substantial scatter of \sigma_{R}=0.88. We compare our results to the theoretical relations between radio flux, black hole mass, and accretion rate derived by Heinz and Sunyaev (2003). Such relations depend only on the assumed accretion model and on the observed radio spectral index. Therefore, we are able to show that the X-ray emission from black holes accreting at less than a few per cent of the Eddington rate is unlikely to be produced by radiatively efficient accretion, and is marginally consistent with optically thin synchrotron emission from the jet. On the other hand, models for radiatively inefficient accretion flows seem to agree well with the data.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures (2 in colour). Revised version accepted for publication by MNRAS. Improved and extended discussio

    The X-ray reflector in NGC 4945: a time and space resolved portrait

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    We present a time, spectral and imaging analysis of the X-ray reflector in NGC 4945, which reveals its geometrical and physical structure with unprecedented detail. NGC 4945 hosts one of the brightest AGN in the sky above 10 keV, but it is only visible through its reflected/scattered emission below 10 keV, due to absorption by a column density of ~4\times10^24 cm-2. A new Suzaku campaign of 5 observations spanning ~6 months, together with past XMM-Newton and Chandra observations, show a remarkable constancy (within <10%) of the reflected component. Instead, Swift-BAT reveals strong intrinsic variability on time scales longer than one year. Modeling the circumnuclear gas as a thin cylinder with the axis on the plane of the sky, we show that the reflector is at a distance >30-50 pc, well within the imaging capabilities of Chandra at the distance of NGC 4945 (1"~18 pc). Accordingly, the Chandra imaging reveals a resolved, flattened, ~150 pc-long clumpy structure, whose spectrum is fully due to cold reflection of the primary AGN emission. The clumpiness may explain the small covering factor derived from the spectral and variability properties.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Eddington Accretion and QSO Emission Lines at z ~ 2

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    Broad Absorption Line (BAL) QSOs have been suggested to be youthful super-accretors based on their powerful radiatively driven absorbing outflows and often reddened continua. To test this hypothesis, we observed near IR spectra of the Hβ\beta region for 11 bright BAL QSOs at redshift z ~ 2. We measured these and literature spectra for 6 BAL QSOs, 13 radio-loud and 7 radio-quiet non-BAL QSOs. Using the luminosity and Hβ\beta broad line width to derive black hole mass and accretion rate, we find that both BAL and non-BAL QSOs at z ~ 2 tend to have higher L/LEddL/L_{Edd} than those at low z -- probably a result of selecting the brightest QSOs. However, we find that the high z QSOs, in particular the BAL QSOs, have extremely strong Fe II and very weak [O III], extending the inverse relationship found for low z QSOs. This suggests that, even while radiating near LEddL_{Edd}, the BAL QSOs have a more plentiful fuel supply than non-BAL QSOs. Comparison with low z QSOs shows for the first time that the inverse Fe II -- [O III] relationship is indeed related to L/LEddL/L_{Edd}, rather than black hole mass.Comment: 18 pages including 5 figures and 1 table. Accepted by the Astrophysical Journal Letter

    Photometric Variability and Astrometric Stability of the Radio Continuum Nucleus in the Seyfert Galaxy NGC 5548

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    The NRAO VLA and VLBA were used from 1988 November to 1998 June to monitor the radio continuum counterpart to the optical broad line region (BLR) in the Seyfert galaxy NGC 5548. Photometric and astrometric observations were obtained at 21 epochs. The radio nucleus appeared resolved, so comparisons were limited to observations spanning 10-60 days and 3-4 yr, and acquired at matched resolutions of 1210 mas = 640 pc (9 VLA observations), 500 mas = 260 pc (9 VLA observations), or 2.3 mas = 1.2 pc (3 VLBA observations). The nucleus is photometrically variable at 8.4 GHz by 33±533\pm5% and 52±552\pm5% between VLA observations separated by 41 days and 4.1 yr, respectively. The 41-day changes are milder (19±519\pm5%) at 4.9 GHz and exhibit an inverted spectrum (α+0.3±0.1\alpha \sim +0.3\pm0.1, Sν+αS\propto \nu ^{+\alpha}) from 4.9 to 8.4 GHz. The nucleus is astrometrically stable at 8.4 GHz, to an accuracy of 28 mas = 15 pc between VLA observations separated by 4.1 yr and to an accuracy of 1.8 mas = 0.95 pc between VLBA observations separated by 3.1 yr. Such photometric variability and astrometric stability is consistent with a black hole being the ultimate energy source for the BLR, but is problematic for star cluster models that treat the BLR as a compact supernova remnant and, for NGC 5548, require a new supernova event every 1.7 yr within an effective radius re=r_e = 42 mas = 22 pc. A deep image at 8.4 GHz with resolution 660 mas = 350 pc was obtained by adding data from quiescent VLA observations. This image shows faint bipolar lobes straddling the radio nucleus and spanning 12 arcsec = 6.4 kpc. These synchrotron-emitting lobes could be driven by twin jets or a bipolar wind from the Seyfert 1 nucleus.Comment: with 9 figures, to appear in the Astrophysical Journal, 2000 March 10, volume 53

    Stability of radiation-pressure dominated disks. I. The dispersion relation for a delayed heating alpha-viscosity prescription

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    We derive and investigate the dispersion relation for accretion disks with retarded or advanced heating. We follow the alpha-prescription but allow for a time offset (\tau) between heating and pressure perturbations, as well as for a diminished response of heating to pressure variations. We study in detail solutions of the dispersion relation for disks with radiation-pressure fraction 1 - \beta . For \tau <0 (delayed heating) the number and sign of real solutions for the growth rate depend on the values of the time lag and the ratio of heating response to pressure perturbations, \xi . If the delay is larger than a critical value (e.g., if \Omega \tau <-125 for \alpha =0.1, \beta =0 and \xi =1) two real solutions exist, which are both negative. These results imply that retarded heating may stabilize radiation-pressure dominated accretion disks.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, to be submitted to A&

    ON THE GEOMETRY OF THE X-RAY EMITTING REGION IN SEYFERT GALAXIES

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    For the first time, detailed radiative transfer calculations of Comptonized X-ray and gamma-ray radiation in a hot pair plasma above a cold accretion disk are performed using two independent codes and methods. The simulations include both energy and pair balance as well as reprocessing of the X- and gamma-rays by the cold disk. We study both plane-parallel coronae as well as active dissipation regions having shapes of hemispheres and pill boxes located on the disk surface. It is shown, contrary to earlier claims, that plane-parallel coronae in pair balance have difficulties in selfconsistently reproducing the ranges of 2-20 keV spectral slopes, high energy cutoffs, and compactnesses inferred from observations of type 1 Seyfert galaxies. Instead, the observations are consistent with the X-rays coming from a number of individual active regions located on the surface of the disk. A number of effects such as anisotropic Compton scattering, the reflection hump, feedback to the soft photon source by reprocessing, and an active region in pair equilibrium all conspire to produce the observed ranges of X-ray slopes, high energy cutoffs, and compactnesses. The spread in spectral X-ray slopes can be due to a spread in the properties of the active regions such as their compactnesses and their elevations above the disk surface. Simplified models invoking isotropic Comptonization in spherical clouds are no longer sufficient when interpreting the data.Comment: 9 pages, 3 postscript figures, figures can be obtained from the authors via e-mail: [email protected]
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