646 research outputs found
An Examination of the Spectral Variability in NGC 1365 with Suzaku
We present jointly analyzed data from three deep Suzaku observations of NGC
1365. These high signal-to-noise spectra enable us to examine the nature of
this variable, obscured AGN in unprecedented detail on timescales ranging from
hours to years. We find that, in addition to the power-law continuum and
absorption from ionized gas seen in most AGN, inner disk reflection and
variable absorption from neutral gas within the Broad Emission Line Region are
both necessary components in all three observations. We confirm the clumpy
nature of the cold absorbing gas, though we note that occultations of the inner
disk and corona are much more pronounced in the high-flux state (2008) than in
the low-flux state (2010) of the source. The onset and duration of the "dips"
in the X-ray light curve in 2010 are both significantly longer than in 2008,
however, indicating that either the distance to the gas from the black hole is
larger, or that the nature of the gas has changed between epochs. We also note
significant variations in the power-law flux over timescales similar to the
cold absorber, both within and between the three observations. The warm
absorber does not vary significantly within observations, but does show
variations in column density of a factor of more than 10 on timescales less
than 2 weeks that seem unrelated to the changes in the continuum, reflection or
cold absorber. By assuming a uniform iron abundance for the reflection and
absorption, we have also established that an iron abundance of roughly 3.5
times the solar value is sufficient to model the broad-band spectrum without
invoking an additional partial-covering absorber. Such a measurement is
consistent with previous published constraints from the 2008 Suzaku observation
alone, and with results from other Seyfert AGN in the literature.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Constraining the Spin of the Black Hole in Fairall 9 with Suzaku
We report on the results of spectral fits made to data obtained from a 168
ksec Suzaku observation of the Seyfert-1 galaxy Fairall 9. The source is
clearly detected out to 30 keV. The observed spectrum is fairly simple; it is
well-described by a power-law with a soft excess and disk reflection. A broad
iron line is detected, and easily separated from distinct narrow components
owing to the resolution of the CCDs in the X-ray Imaging Spectrometer (XIS).
The broad line is revealed to be asymmetric, consistent with a disk origin. We
fit the XIS and Hard X-ray Detector (HXD) spectra with relativistically-blurred
disk reflection models. With the assumption that the inner disk extends to the
innermost stable circular orbit, the best-fit model implies a black hole spin
parameter of a = 0.60(7) and excludes extremal values at a high level of
confidence. We discuss this result in the context of Seyfert observations and
models of the cosmic distribution of black hole spin.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Kinetics of Ehrlich ascites tumor growth within millipore chambers in normal and immunized mice.
THE proliferation of malignant cells has been shown to depend not only on intrinsic neoplastic properties but also on environmental circumstances, in vivo (host) or in vitro (medium). In addition, a changing rate of growth in a continuing environment has been documented in tumor-bearing hosts and tissue culture situations. The kinetics of neoplastic cells (i.e. Ehrlich ascites tumor cells-EAT) have been studied with regard to cellular proliferation within cell-tight millipore chambers by Amos and Wakefield (1958) (among others), particularly concerning the growth rate of cells in normal mice and the rate of entry of iso-antibody into the chambers. The present investigations define the growth pattern of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells within the restricted environment of millipore chambers in actively immunized mice. MATERIALS AND METHODS White Swiss mice of both sexes (HA/ICR strain), 3-4 months old, were used in this study. The tumor cells used were Lettre strain, hyperdiploid Ehrlich ascites tumor originally obtained from Roswell Park Memorial Institute and grow
The changing X-ray time lag in MCG-6-30-15
MCG-6-30-15 is one of the most observed Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxies in the
X-ray band. In this paper we examine the X-ray time lags in this source using a
total of 600 ks in observations (440 ks exposure) taken with the XMM-Newton
telescope (300 ks in 2001 and 300 ks in 2013). Both the old and new
observations show the usual hard lag that increases with energy, however, the
hard lag turns over to a soft lag at frequencies below ~1e-4 Hz. The highest
frequencies (~1e-3 Hz) in this source show a clear soft lag, as previously
presented for the first 300 ks observation, but no clear iron K lag is detected
in either the old or new observation. The soft lag is more significant in the
old observation than the new. The observations are consistent with a
reverberation interpretation, where the soft, reflected emission is delayed
with respect to the hard powerlaw component. These spectral timing results
suggest that two distinct variability mechanisms are important in this source:
intrinsic coronal variations (which lead to correlated variability in the
reprocessed emission), and geometrical changes in the corona. Variability due
to geometrical changes does not result in correlated variability in the
reflection, and therefore inhibits the clear detection of an iron K lag.Comment: Resubmitted to MNRAS after minor corrections. 11 pages, 10 figure
Revealing the X-ray Variability of AGN with Principal Component Analysis
We analyse a sample of 26 active galactic nuclei with deep XMM-Newton
observations, using principal component analysis (PCA) to find model
independent spectra of the different variable components. In total, we identify
at least 12 qualitatively different patterns of spectral variability, involving
several different mechanisms, including five sources which show evidence of
variable relativistic reflection (MCG-6-30-15, NGC 4051, 1H 0707-495, NGC 3516
and Mrk 766) and three which show evidence of varying partial covering neutral
absorption (NGC 4395, NGC 1365, and NGC 4151). In over half of the sources
studied, the variability is dominated by changes in a power law continuum, both
in terms of changes in flux and power law index, which could be produced by
propagating fluctuations within the corona. Simulations are used to find unique
predictions for different physical models, and we then attempt to qualitatively
match the results from the simulations to the behaviour observed in the real
data. We are able to explain a large proportion of the variability in these
sources using simple models of spectral variability, but more complex models
may be needed for the remainder. We have begun the process of building up a
library of different principal components, so that spectral variability in AGN
can quickly be matched to physical processes. We show that PCA can be an
extremely powerful tool for distinguishing different patterns of variability in
AGN, and that it can be used effectively on the large amounts of high-quality
archival data available from the current generation of X-ray telescopes.Comment: 25 pages, 27 figures, accepted to MNRAS. Analysis code available on
request to lead author. Edit: Rogue table remove
A Suzaku, NuSTAR, and XMM-Newton view on variable absorption and relativistic reflection in NGC 4151
We disentangle X-ray disk reflection from complex line-of-sight absorption in
the nearby Seyfert NGC 4151, using a suite of Suzaku, NuSTAR, and XMM-Newton
observations. Extending upon earlier published work, we pursue a physically
motivated model using the latest angle-resolved version of the lamp-post
geometry reflection model relxillCp_lp together with a Comptonization
continuum. We use the long-look simultaneous Suzaku/NuSTAR observation to
develop a baseline model wherein we model reflected emission as a combination
of lamp-post components at the heights of 1.2 and 15.0 gravitational radii. We
argue for a vertically extended corona as opposed to two compact and distinct
primary sources. We find two neutral absorbers (one full-covering and one
partial-covering), an ionized absorber (), and a highly-ionized
ultra-fast outflow, which have all been reported previously. All analyzed
spectra are well described by this baseline model. The bulk of the spectral
variability between 1 keV and 6 keV can be accounted for by changes in the
column density of both neutral absorbers, which appear to be degenerate and
inversely correlated with the variable hard continuum component flux. We track
variability in absorption on both short (2 d) and long (1 yr) timescales;
the observed evolution is either consistent with changes in the absorber
structure (clumpy absorber at distances ranging from the broad line region
(BLR) to the inner torus or a dusty radiatively driven wind) or a geometrically
stable neutral absorber that becomes increasingly ionized at a rising flux
level. The soft X-rays below 1 keV are dominated by photoionized emission from
extended gas that may act as a warm mirror for the nuclear radiation.Comment: 21 pages, 19 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication by A&
Blunt Liver Trauma at Sunnybrook Medical Centre: A 13 Year Experience
Between June 1, 1976 and June 30, 1989 The Regional Trauma Unit at Sunnybrook Medical Centre in
Toronto, Ontario, Canada received 3730 patients. Of these 335 (9%) sustained a liver injury, 95% being
due to blunt trauma. Open peritoneal lavage was performed on 80% of liver trauma patients (267/335),
99% being true positive
Astrophysical Violations of the Kerr Bound as a Possible Signature of String Theory
In 4D general relativity, the angular momentum of a black hole is limited by
the Kerr bound. We suggest that in string theory, this bound can be breached
and compact black-hole-like objects can spin faster. Near such "superspinars,"
the efficiency of energy transfer from the accreting matter to radiation can
reach 100%, compared to the maximum efficiency of 42% of the extremal Kerr (or
6% of the Schwarzschild) black hole. Finding such superspinning objects as
active galactic nuclei, GBHCs, or sources of gamma ray bursts, could be viewed
as experimental support for string theory.Comment: 4 page
Principal component analysis of MCG–06-30-15 with XMM–Newton
We analyse the spectral variability of MCG–06-30-15 with 600 k s of XMM–Newton data, including 300 k s of new data from the joint XMM–Newton and NuSTAR 2013 observational campaign. We use principal component analysis to find high-resolution, model-independent spectra of the different variable components of the spectrum. We find that over 99 per cent of the variability can be described by just three components, which are consistent with variations in the normalization of the power-law continuum (∼97 per cent), the photon index (∼2 per cent) and the normalization of a relativistically blurred reflection spectrum (∼0.5 per cent). We also find a fourth significant component but this is heavily diluted by noise, and we can attribute all the remaining spectral variability to noise. All three components are found to be variable on time-scales from 20 down to 1 k s, which corresponds to a distance from the central black hole of less than 70 gravitational radii. We compare these results with those derived from spectral fitting, and find them to be in very good agreement with our interpretation of the principal components. We conclude that the observed relatively weak variability in the reflected component of the spectrum of MCG–06-30-15 is due to the effects of light-bending close to the event horizon of the black hole, and demonstrate that principal component analysis is an effective tool for analysing spectral variability in this regime
Iron line profiles in Suzaku spectra of bare Seyfert galaxies
We methodically model the broad-band Suzaku spectra of a small sample of six
'bare' Seyfert galaxies: Ark 120, Fairall 9, MCG-02-14-009, Mrk 335, NGC 7469
and SWIFT J2127.4+5654. The analysis of bare Seyferts allows a consistent and
physical modelling of AGN due to a weak amount of any intrinsic warm
absorption, removing the degeneracy between the spectral curvature due to warm
absorption and the red-wing of the Fe K region. Through effective modelling of
the broad-band spectrum and investigating the presence of narrow neutral or
ionized emission lines and reflection from distant material, we obtain an
accurate and detailed description of the Fe K line region using models such as
laor, kerrdisk and kerrconv.
Results suggest that ionized emission lines at 6.7 keV and 6.97 keV
(particularly Fe XXVI) are relatively common and the inclusion of these lines
can greatly affect the parameters obtained with relativistic models i.e. spin,
emissivity, inner radius of emission and inclination. Moderately broad
components are found in all objects, but typically the emission originates from
tens of Rg, rather than within <6Rg of the black hole. Results obtained with
kerrdisk line profiles suggest an average emissivity of q~2.3 at intermediate
spin values with all objects ruling out the presence of a maximally spinning
black hole at the 90% confidence level. We also present new spin constraints
for Mrk 335 and NGC 7469 with intermediate values of a=0.70(+0.12,-0.01) and
a=0.69(+0.09,-0.09) respectively.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, 9 tables, MNRAS accepte
- …