17 research outputs found

    The curtain remains open: NGC 2617 continues in a high state

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    Optical and near-infrared photometry, optical spectroscopy, and soft X-ray and UV monitoring of the changing-look active galactic nucleus NGC 2617 show that it continues to have the appearance of a type-1 Seyfert galaxy. An optical light curve for 2010-2016 indicates that the change of type probably occurred between 2010 October and 2012 February and was not related to the brightening in 2013. In 2016, NGC 2617 brightened again to a level of activity close to that in 2013 April. We find variations in all passbands and in both the intensities and profiles of the broad Balmer lines. A new displaced emission peak has appeared in Ha. X-ray variations are well correlated with UV-optical variability and possibly lead by similar to 2-3 d. The K band lags the J band by about 21.5 +/- 2.5 d and lags the combined B + J filters by similar to 25 d. J lags B by about 3 d. This could be because J-band variability arises from the outer part of the accretion disc, while K-band variability comes from thermal re-emission by dust. We propose that spectral-type changes are a result of increasing central luminosity causing sublimation of the innermost dust in the hollow bi-conical outflow. We briefly discuss various other possible reasons that might explain the dramatic changes in NGC 2617

    Variability and the size-luminosity relation of the intermediate mass AGN in NGC 4395

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    We present the variability study of the lowest-luminosity Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 4395 based on the photometric monitoring campaigns in 2017 and 2018. Using 22 ground-based and space telescopes, we monitored NGC 4395 with a \sim5 minute cadence during a period of 10 days and obtained light curves in the UV, V, J, H, and K/Ks bands as well as the Hα\alpha narrow-band. The RMS variability is \sim0.13 mag on \emph{Swift}-UVM2 and V filter light curves, decreasing down to \sim0.01 mag on K filter. After correcting for continuum contribution to the Hα\alpha narrow-band, we measured the time lag of the Hα\alpha emission line with respect to the V-band continuum as 5531+27{55}^{+27}_{-31} to 12267+33{122}^{+33}_{-67} min. in 2017 and 4914+15{49}^{+15}_{-14} to 8314+13{83}^{+13}_{-14} min. in 2018, depending on the assumption on the continuum variability amplitude in the Hα\alpha narrow-band. We obtained no reliable measurements for the continuum-to-continuum lag between UV and V bands and among near-IR bands, due to the large flux uncertainty of UV observations and the limited time baseline. We determined the AGN monochromatic luminosity at 5100\AA\ λLλ=(5.75±0.40)×1039ergs1\lambda L_\lambda = \left(5.75\pm0.40\right)\times 10^{39}\,\mathrm{erg\,s^{-1}}, after subtracting the contribution of the nuclear star cluster. While the optical luminosity of NGC 4395 is two orders of magnitude lower than that of other reverberation-mapped AGNs, NGC 4395 follows the size-luminosity relation, albeit with an offset of 0.48 dex (\geq2.5σ\sigma) from the previous best-fit relation of Bentz et al. (2013).Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (Feb. 23rd, 2020). 18 pages, 10 figure
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