1,857 research outputs found
1ES 1927+654: Persistent and rapid X-ray variability in an AGN with low intrinsic neutral X-ray absorption and narrow optical emission lines
We present X-ray and optical observations of the X-ray bright AGN 1ES
1927+654. The X-ray observations obtained with ROSAT and Chandra reveal
persistent, rapid and large scale variations, as well as steep 0.1-2.4 keV
(Gamma = 2.6 +/- 0.3) and 0.3-7.0 keV (Gamma = 2.7 +/- 0.2) spectra. The
measured intrinsic neutral X-ray column density is approximately 7e20cm^-2. The
X-ray timing properties indicate that the strong variations originate from a
region, a few hundred light seconds from the central black hole, typical for
type 1 AGN. High quality optical spectroscopy reveals a typical Seyfert 2
spectrum with some host galaxy contamination and no evidence of Fe II
multiplets or broad hydrogen Balmer wings. The intrinsic optical extinction
derived from the BLR and NLR are A_V >= 3.7 and A_V=1.7, respectively. The
X-ray observations give an A_V value of less than 0.58, in contrast to the
optical extinction values. We discuss several ideas to explain this apparent
difference in classification including partial covering, an underluminous BLR
or a high dust to gas ratio.Comment: 8 pages including 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
Mrk 1014: An AGN Dominated ULIRG at X-rays
In this paper we report on an XMM-Newton observation of the ultraluminous
infrared QSO Mrk 1014. The X-ray observation reveals a power-law dominated
(photon index of about 2.2) spectrum with a slight excess in the soft energy
range. AGN and starburst emission models fit the soft excess emission equally
well, however, the most plausible explanation is an AGN component as the
starburst model parameter, temperature and luminosity, appear physically
unrealistic. The mean luminosity of Mrk 1014 is about 2 times 10^44 erg s^-1.
We have also observed excess emission at energies greater than 5 keV. This
feature could be attributed to a broadened and redshifted iron complex, but
deeper observations are required to constrain its origin. The light curve shows
small scale variability over the 11 ks observation. There is no evidence of
intrinsic absorption in Mrk 1014. The X-ray observations support the notion of
an AGN dominated central engine. We establish the need for a longer observation
to constrain more precisely the nature of the X-ray components.Comment: 5 pages incl. 3 figures, MNRAS in pres
Spectropolarimetry of the Luminous Narrow-Line Seyfert Galaxies IRAS 20181-2244 and IRAS 13224-3809
We observed the narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies IRAS 20181-2244 and IRAS
13324-3809 with a new spectropolarimeter on the RC spectrograph at the CTIO 4m
telescope. Previously it had been suggested that IRAS 20181-2244 was a Type 2
QSO and thus might contain an obscured broad-line region which could be
detected by the presence of broad Balmer lines in the polarized flux. We found
the object to be polarized at about 2%, and constant with wavelength, (unlike
most narrow-line Seyfert 1s), but with no evidence of broad Balmer lines in
polarized flux. The spectropolarimetry indicates that the scattering material
is inside the BLR. IRAS 13224-3809, notable for its high variability in X-ray
and UV wavelengths, has a low polarization consistent with a Galactic
interstellar origin.Comment: 19 pages using (AASTEX) aaspp4.sty and 5 postscript figures To be
published in the Astrophysical Journa
XMM-Newton observation of the ULIRG NGC 6240: The physical nature of the complex Fe K line emission
We report on an XMM-Newton observation of the ultraluminous infrared galaxy
NGC 6240. The 0.3-10 keV spectrum can be successfully modelled with: (i) three
collisionally ionized plasma components with temperatures of about 0.7, 1.4,
and 5.5 keV; (ii) a highly absorbed direct power-law component; and (iii) a
neutral Fe K_alpha and K_beta line. We detect a significant neutral column
density gradient which is correlated with the temperature of the three plasma
components. Combining the XMM-Newton spectral model with the high spatial
resolution Chandra image we find that the temperatures and the column densities
increase towards the center.
With high significance, the Fe K line complex is resolved into three distinct
narrow lines: (i) the neutral Fe K_alpha line at 6.4 keV; (ii) an ionized line
at about 6.7 keV; and (iii) a higher ionized line at 7.0 keV (a blend of the Fe
XXVI and the Fe K_beta line). While the neutral Fe K line is most probably due
to reflection from optically thick material, the Fe XXV and Fe XXVI emission
arises from the highest temperature ionized plasma component.
We have compared the plasma parameters of the ultraluminous infrared galaxy
NGC 6240 with those found in the local starburst galaxy NGC 253. We find a
striking similarity in the plasma temperatures and column density gradients,
suggesting a similar underlying physical process at work in both galaxies.Comment: 8 pages including 9 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Central Masses and Broad-Line Region Sizes of Active Galactic Nuclei: I. Comparing the Photoionization and Reverberation Techniques
The masses and emission-line region sizes of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs)
can be measured by ``reverberation-mapping'' (measuring the lag of the
emission-line luminosity after changes in the continuum). We use tis technique
to calibrate similar size and mass estimates made by photoionization models of
the AGN line-emitting regions. We compile a sample of 19 AGNs with reliable
reverberation and spectroscopy data, twice the number available previously. The
data provide strong evidence that the BLR size and the emission-line width
measure directly the central mass. Two methods are used to estimate the
distance of the broad emission-line region (BLR) from the ionizing source: the
photoionization method (available for many AGNs but has large intrinsic
uncertainties), and the reverberation method (gives very reliable distances,
but available for only a few objects). The distance estimate is combined with
the velocity dispersion, derived from the broad Hb line profile, to estimate
the virial mass. Comparing the central masses calculated with the reverberation
method to those calculated using a photoionization model, we find a highly
significant, nearly linear correlation. This provides a calibration of the
photoionization method on the objects with presently available reverberation
data, which should enable mass estimates for all AGNs with measured Hb line
width. Comparing the BLR sizes given by the two methods also enables us to
estimate the ionizing EUV luminosity which is directly unobservable. We find it
to be typically ten times the visible (monochromatic luminosity at 5100A). The
inferred Eddington ratio of the individual objects in our sample are 0.001-0.03
(visible luminosity) and 0.01-0.3 (ionizing luminosity).Comment: 27 pages Latex, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
An X-ray view of Mrk 705: A borderline narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy
Mrk 705 exhibits optical properties of both narrow- and broad-line Seyfert 1
galaxies. We examine the X-ray properties of this borderline object utilising
proprietary and public data from Chandra, ASCA, ROSAT and RXTE, spanning more
than twelve years. Though long-term flux variability from the pointed
observations appears rather modest (about 3 times), we do find examples of rare
large amplitude outbursts in the RXTE monitoring data. There is very little
evidence of long-term spectral variability as the low- and high-energy spectra
appear constant with time. A 6.4 keV emission line is detected in the ASCA
spectra of Mrk 705, but not during the later, higher flux state Chandra
observation. However, the upper limit on the equivalent width of a line in the
Chandra spectrum is consistent with a constant-flux emission line and a
brighter continuum, suggesting that the line is emitted from distant material
such as the putative torus. Overall, the X-ray properties of Mrk 705 appear
typical of BLS1 activity.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A (Research Note
A New Sample of Low-mass Black Holes in Active Galaxies
We present an expanded sample of low-mass black holes (BHs) found in galactic
nuclei. Using standard virial mass techniques to estimate BH masses, we select
from the Fourth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey all broad-line
active galaxies with masses < 2 x 10^6 M_sun. BHs in this mass regime provide
unique tests of the relationship between BHs and galaxies, since their
late-type galaxy hosts do not necessarily contain classical bulges.
Furthermore, they provide observational analogs of primordial seed BHs and are
expected, when merging, to provide strong gravitational signals for future
detectors such as LISA. From our preliminary sample of 19, we have increased
the total sample by an order of magnitude to 174, as well as an additional 55
(less secure) candidates. The sample has a median BH mass of = 1.3 x
10^6 M_sun, and in general the objects are radiating at high fractions of their
Eddington limits. We investigate the broad spectral properties of the sample;
55 are detected by \rosat, with soft X-ray luminosities in the range 10^40 to 7
x 10^43 ergs/sec. Much like the preliminary sample, these objects are
predominantly radio-quiet (R = f_6cm/f_4400A < 10), but 11 objects are detected
at 20 cm, with radio powers (10^21-10^23 W/Hz) that may arise from either star
formation or nuclear activity; only 1% of the sample is radio-loud. We further
confirm that, with =-19.3 and = 0.7 mag, the host galaxies are
low-mass, late-type systems. At least 40% show disk-like morphologies, and the
combination of host galaxy colors and higher-order Balmer absorption lines
indicate intermediate-age stellar populations in a subset of the sample.Comment: to appear in ApJ; 13 pages, 8 figure
Spectroscopic Properties of QSOs Selected from Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxy Samples
We performed spectroscopic observations for a large infrared QSO sample with
a total of 25 objects. The sample was compiled from the QDOT redshift survey,
the 1 Jy ULIRGs survey and a sample obtained by a cross-correlation study of
the IRAS Point Source Catalogue with the ROSAT All Sky Survey Catalogue.
Statistical analyses of the optical spectra show that the vast majority of
infrared QSOs have narrow permitted emission lines (with FWHM of Hbeta less
than 4000 km/s) and more than 60% of them are luminous narrow line Seyfert 1
galaxies. Two of the infrared QSOs are also classified as low ionization BAL
QSOs. More than 70% of infrared QSOs are moderately or extremely strong Fe II
emitters. This is the highest percentage of strong Fe II emitters in all
subclasses of QSO/Seyfert 1 samples. We found that the Fe II to Hbeta, line
ratio is significantly correlated with the [OIII]5007 peak and Hbeta blueshift.
Soft X-ray weak infrared QSOs tend to have large blueshifts in permitted
emission lines and significant Fe II48,49 (5100--5400 A) residuals relative to
the Boroson & Green Fe II template. If the blueshifts in permitted lines are
caused by outflows, then they appear to be common in infrared QSOs. As the
infrared-selected QSO sample includes both luminous narrow line Seyfert 1
galaxies and low ionization BAL QSOs, it could be a useful laboratory to
investigate the evolutionary connection among these objects.Comment: 35 pages,14 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in A
The Host Galaxy and Central Engine of the Dwarf AGN POX 52
We present new multi-wavelength observations of the dwarf Seyfert 1 galaxy
POX 52 in order to investigate the properties of the host galaxy and the active
nucleus, and to examine the mass of its black hole, previously estimated to be
~ 10^5 M_sun. Hubble Space Telescope ACS/HRC images show that the host galaxy
has a dwarf elliptical morphology (M_I = -18.4 mag, Sersic index n = 4.3) with
no detected disk component or spiral structure, confirming previous results
from ground-based imaging. X-ray observations from both Chandra and XMM show
strong (factor of 2) variability over timescales as short as 500 s, as well as
a dramatic decrease in the absorbing column density over a 9 month period. We
attribute this change to a partial covering absorber, with a 94% covering
fraction and N_H = 58^{+8.4}_{-9.2} * 10^21 cm^-2, that moved out of the line
of sight in between the XMM and Chandra observations. Combining these data with
observations from the VLA, Spitzer, and archival data from 2MASS and GALEX, we
examine the spectral energy distribution (SED) of the active nucleus. Its shape
is broadly similar to typical radio-quiet quasar SEDs, despite the very low
bolometric luminosity of L_bol = 1.3 * 10^43 ergs/s. Finally, we compare black
hole mass estimators including methods based on X-ray variability, and optical
scaling relations using the broad H-beta line width and AGN continuum
luminosity, finding a range of black hole mass from all methods to be M_bh =
(2.2-4.2) * 10^5 M_sun, with an Eddington ratio of L_bol/L_edd = 0.2-0.5.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Detailed Analysis of Balmer Lines in a Sloan Digital Sky Survey Sample of 90 Broad Line Active Galactic Nuclei
In order to contribute to the general effort aiming at the improvement of our
knowledge about the physical conditions within the Broad Line Region (BLR) of
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), here we present the results achieved by our
analysis of the spectral properties of a sample of 90 broad line emitting
sources, collected at the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) database. By focusing
our attention mainly onto the Balmer series of hydrogen emission lines, which
is the dominant feature in the optical wavelength range of many BLR spectra, we
extracted several flux and profile measurements, which we related to other
source properties, such as optical continuum luminosities, inferred black hole
masses, and accretion rates. Using the Boltzmann Plot method to investigate the
Balmer line flux ratios as a function of the line profiles, we found that
broader line emitting AGN typically have larger H_alpha / H_beta and smaller
H_gamma / H_beta and H_delta / H_beta line ratios. With the help of some recent
investigations, we model the structure of the BLR and we study the influence of
the accretion process on the properties of the BLR plasma.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, fixes the wrong names of 4 objects; published
on Ap
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