1,404 research outputs found
VLBI Imaging of Water Maser Emission from the Nuclear Torus of NGC 1068
We have made the first VLBI synthesis images of the H2O maser emission
associated with the central engine of the Seyfert galaxy NGC 1068. Emission
extends about +/-300 km/s from the systemic velocity. Images with
submilliarcsecond angular resolution show that the red-shifted emission lies
along an arc to the northwest of the systemic emission. (The blue-shifted
emission has not yet been imaged with VLBI.) Based on the maser velocities and
the relative orientation of the known radio jet, we propose that the maser
emission arises on the surface of a nearly edge-on torus, where physical
conditions are conducive to maser action. The visible part of the torus is
axially thick, with comparable height and radius. The velocity field indicates
sub-Keplerian differential rotation around a central mass of about 1e7 Msun
that lies within a cylindrical radius of about 0.65 pc. The estimated
luminosity of the central engine is about 0.5 of the Eddington limit. There is
no detectable compact radio continuum emission near the proposed center of the
torus (T_B< 5e6 K on size scales of about 0.1 pc), so that the observed
flat-spectrum core cannot be direct self-absorbed synchrotron radiation.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. To appear in ApJ Part 2. Also available at
http://www.physics.ucsb.edu/~vlbiweb
Variable Iron K-alpha Lines in Seyfert 1 Galaxies
We find that variability of the iron K-alpha line is common in Seyfert 1
galaxies. Using data from the ASCA archive for objects that have been observed
more than once during the mission, we study the time-averaged spectra from
individual observations, thereby probing variability on timescales that range
from days to years. Since the statistics of the data do not warrant searches
for line variability in terms of a complex physical model, we use a a simple
Gaussian to model the gross shape of the line, and then use the centroid
energy, intensity and equivalent width as robust indicators of changes in the
line profile. We find that ~70% of Seyfert 1s (ten out of fifteen) show
variability in at least one of these parameters: the centroid energy,
intensity, and equivalent width vary in six, four, and eight sources
respectively. Due to the low S/N, limited sampling and time averaging, we
consider these results to represent lower limits to the rate of incidence of
variability. In most cases changes in the line do not appear to track changes
in the continuum. In particular, we find no evidence for variability of the
line intensity in NGC 4151, suggesting an origin in a region larger than the
putative accretion disk, where most of the iron line has been thought to
originate. Mkn 279 is investigated on short timescales. The time-averaged
effective line energy is 6.5 keV in the galaxy rest frame. As the continuum
flux increases by 20% in a few hours, the Fe K line responds with the effective
line energy increasing by 0.22 keV (~10,500 km s^-1). Problems with the ASCA
and Rosat calibration that affect simultaneous spectral fits are discussed in
an appendix.Comment: 26 pages, 30 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Polarized Broad-Line Emission from Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei
In order to determine whether unified models of active galactic nuclei apply
to low-luminosity objects, we have undertaken a spectropolarimetric survey of
of LINERs and Seyfert nuclei at the Keck Observatory. The 14 objects observed
have a median H-alpha luminosity of 8x10^{39} erg/s, well below the typical
value of ~10^{41} erg/s for Markarian Seyfert nuclei. Polarized broad H-alpha
emission is detected in three LINERs: NGC 315, NGC 1052, and NGC 4261. Each of
these is an elliptical galaxy with a double-sided radio jet, and the
emission-line polarization in each case is oriented roughly perpendicular to
the jet axis, as expected for the obscuring torus model. NGC 4261 and NGC 315
are known to contain dusty circumnuclear disks, which may be the outer
extensions of the obscuring tori. The detection of polarized broad-line
emission suggests that these objects are nearby, low-luminosity analogs of
obscured quasars residing in narrow-line radio galaxies. The nuclear continuum
of the low-luminosity Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 4395 is polarized at p = 0.67%,
possibly the result of an electron scattering region near the nucleus.
Continuum polarization is detected in other objects, with a median level of p =
0.36% over 5100-6100 A, but in most cases this is likely to be the result of
transmission through foreground dust. The lack of significant broad-line
polarization in most type 1 LINERs is consistent with the hypothesis that we
view the broad-line regions of these objects directly, rather than in scattered
light.Comment: 28 pages, including 3 tables and 16 figures. Uses the emulateapj
latex style file. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Broad Band X-Ray Observations of the Narrow Line X-Ray Galaxy NGC 5506
We present a detailed analysis of broad band X-ray data of the Seyfert 2
galaxy NGC5506. 2-10 keV band are detected during a 1-day ASCA observation,
while no significant change in the 2-10 keV continuum shape is found. The ASCA
spectrum consists of an absorbed power-law, a 'soft excess' below 2 keV, and an
Fe K emission line at 6.4 keV. The 'soft excess' can be well described
by either thermal emission from very low abundance material at a temperature
kT0.8 keV, or scattered/leaking flux from the primary power-law plus a
small amount of thermal emission. Analysis of ROSAT HRI data reveals that the
soft X-ray emission is extended on kpc scales in this object, and the extended
component may account for most of the soft X-ray excess observed by the ASCA.
The result suggests that in this type 2 AGN, the 'soft excess' at least partly
comes from an extended region, imposing serious problem for the model in which
the source is partially covered. Fe K profile is complex and can not be
satisfactorily modeled by a single gaussian. Models of either double gaussians,
or a narrow gaussian plus a line from a relativistic accretion disk viewed at
an inclination of about 40 provide good fits to the data. However,
the inclination of the disk can be substantially larger if there is a small
amount of excessive Fe K edge absorption. The intermediate inclinations for
NLXGs are consistent with the ideas that the inner accretion disk is aligned
with the outer obscuring torus.Comment: 8 pages, 5 postscript figures. to appear in Astrophy. J., 1999, April
2
Near-infrared and X-ray obscuration to the nucleus of the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 3281
We present the results of a near-infrared and X-ray study of the Seyfert 2
galaxy NGC 3281. Emission from the Seyfert nucleus is detected in both regions
of the electromagnetic spectrum, allowing us to infer both the equivalent line
of sight hydrogen column density, N_H = 71.0(+11.3,-12.3)e26/m^2 and the
extinction due to dust, A_V = 22+/-11 magnitudes (90% confidence intervals). We
infer a ratio of N_H/A_V which is an order of magnitude larger than that
determined along lines of sight in the Milky Way and discuss possible
interpretations. We consider the most plausible explanation to be a dense cloud
in the foreground of both the X-ray and infrared emitting regions which
obscures the entire X-ray source but only a fraction of the much larger
infrared source.Comment: 23 pages including 9 figure
Transient and Highly Polarized Double-Peaked H-alpha Emission in the Seyfert 2 Nucleus of NGC 2110
We have discovered an extremely broad, double-peaked H-alpha emission line in
the polarized flux spectrum of NGC 2110, establishing that this well-studied
Seyfert 2 galaxy contains a disk-like hidden broad-line region (BLR). Several
properties of NGC 2110 suggest that it is an obscured twin of Arp 102B, the
prototypical double-peaked emission-line active galactic nucleus (AGN). A
comparison between our data and previous spectra of NGC 2110 indicates that the
double-peaked H-alpha feature is transient. The presence of a disk-like BLR in
NGC 2110 has important implications for AGNs: it expands the range of
properties exhibited by Seyfert 2 galaxies, and the fact that the BLR is
obscured by a torus-like structure provides the first evidence that
double-peaked emitters and classical Seyfert nuclei may have the same basic
parsec-scale geometry.Comment: 5 pages, including 3 postscript figures. Uses emulateapj. Accepted
for publication in ApJ Letter
VLBI Polarimetry of 177 Sources from the Caltech-Jodrell Bank Flat-spectrum Survey
We present VLBA observations and a statistical analysis of 5 GHz VLBI
polarimetry data from 177 sources in the Caltech-Jodrell Bank flat-spectrum
(CJF) survey. The CJF survey, a complete, flux-density-limited sample of 293
extragalactic radio sources, gives us the unique opportunity to compare a broad
range of source properties for quasars, galaxies and BL Lacertae objects. We
focus primarily on jet properties, specifically the correlation between the jet
axis angle and the polarization angle in the core and jet. A strong correlation
is found for the electric vector polarization angle in the cores of quasars to
be perpendicular to the jet axis. Contrary to previous claims, no correlation
is found between the jet polarization angle and the jet axis in either quasars
or BL Lac objects. With this large, homogeneous sample we are also able to
investigate cosmological issues and AGN evolution.Comment: Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal: 37 pages, 14 figure
A variability study of the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 6300 with XMM-Newton
We present the results of timing analysis of the XMM-Newton observation of
the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 6300. The hard X-ray spectrum above 2 keV consists of
a Compton-thin-absorbed power law, as is often seen in Seyfert 2 galaxies. We
clearly detected rapid time variability on a time scale of about 1000 s from
the light curve above 2 keV. The excess variance of the time variability
(sigma2_RMS) is calculated to be ~0.12, and the periodogram of the light curve
is well represented by a power law function with a slope of 1.75. In contrast
with previous results from Seyfert 2 nuclei, these variability characteristics
are consistent with those of Seyfert 1 galaxies. This consistency suggests that
NGC 6300 has a similar black hole mass and accretion properties as Seyfert 1
galaxies. Using the relation between time variability and central black hole
mass by Hayashida et al. (1998), the black hole mass of NGC 6300 is estimated
to be ~2.8x10^5 Mo. Taking uncertainty of this method into account, the black
hole mass is less than 10^7 Mo. Taking the bolometric luminosity of 3.3x10^43
erg/s into consideration, this yields an accretion rate of > 0.03 of the
Eddington value, and comparable with estimates from Seyfert 1 galaxies using
this method. The time variability analysis suggests that NGC 6300 actually has
a Seyfert 1 nucleus obscured by a thick matter, and more generally provides a
new pillar of support for the unified model of Seyfert galaxies based on
obscuration.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
A Composite Seyfert 2 X-ray Spectrum: Implications for the Origin of the Cosmic X-ray Background
We present a composite 1-10 keV Seyfert 2 X-ray spectrum, derived from ASCA
observations of a distance-limited sample of nearby galaxies. All 29 observed
objects were detected. Above ~3 keV, the composite spectrum is inverted,
confirming that Seyfert 2 galaxies as a class have the spectral properties
necessary to explain the flat shape of the cosmic X-ray background spectrum.
Integrating the composite spectrum over redshift, we find that the total
emission from Seyfert 2 galaxies, combined with the expected contribution from
unabsorbed type 1 objects, provides an excellent match to the spectrum and
intensity of the hard X-ray background. The principal uncertainty in this
procedure is the cosmic evolution of the Seyfert 2 X-ray luminosity function.
Separate composite spectra for objects in our sample with and without polarized
broad optical emission lines are also presented.Comment: 11 pages (AASTeX), including 3 figures. Accepted for publication in
ApJ Letter
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