3,480 research outputs found
Tracking the Complex Absorption in NGC 2110 with Two Suzaku Observations
We present spectral analysis of two Suzaku observations of the Seyfert 2
galaxy, NGC 2110. This source has been known to show complex, variable
absorption which we study in depth by analyzing these two observations set
seven years apart and by comparing to previously analyzed observations with the
XMM-Newton and Chandra observatories. We find that there is a relatively
stable, full-covering absorber with a column density of ~3
cm, with an additional patchy absorber that is likely variable in both
column density and covering fraction over timescales of years, consistent with
clouds in a patchy torus or in the broad line region. We model a soft emission
line complex, likely arising from ionized plasma and consistent with previous
studies. We find no evidence for reflection from an accretion disk in this
source with no contribution from relativistically broadened Fe Ka line emission
nor from a Compton reflection hump.Comment: Accepted to ApJ: March, 201
Precision Fe Kalpha and Fe Kbeta Line Spectroscopy of the Seyfert 1.9 Galaxy NGC 2992 with Suzaku
We present detailed time-averaged X-ray spectroscopy in the 0.5--10 keV band
of the Seyfert~1.9 galaxy NGC 2992 with the Suzaku X-ray Imaging Spectrometers
(XIS). We model the complex continuum in detail. There is an Fe K line emission
complex that we model with broad and narrow lines and we show that the
intensities of the two components are decoupled at a confidence level >3sigma.
The broad Fe K line has an EW of 118 (+32,-61) eV and could originate in an
accretion disk (with inclination angle greater than ~30 degrees). The narrow Fe
Kalpha line has an EW of 163 (+47,-26) eV and is unresolved FWHM <4090 km/s)
and likely originates in distant matter. The absolute flux in the narrow line
implies that the column density out of the line-of-sight could be much higher
than measured in the line-of-sight, and that the mean (historically-averaged)
continuum luminosity responsible for forming the line could be a factor of
several higher than that measured from the data. We also detect the narrow Fe
Kbeta line with a high signal-to-noise ratio and describe a new robust method
to constrain the ionization state of Fe responsible for the Fe Kalpha and Fe
Kbeta lines that does not require any knowledge of possible gravitational and
Doppler energy shifts affecting the line energies. For the distant
line-emitting matter (e.g. the putative obscuring torus) we deduce that the
predominant ionization state is lower than Fe VIII (at 99% confidence),
conservatively taking into account residual calibration uncertainties in the
XIS energy scale and theoretical and experimental uncertainties in the Fe K
fluorescent line energies. From the limits on a possible Compton-reflection
continuum it is likely that the narrow Fe Kalpha and Fe Kbeta lines originate
in a Compton-thin structure.Comment: Abstract is abridged. Accepted for publication in the Suzaku special
issue of PASJ (November 2006). 18 pages, 6 figure
Wide-band spectroscopy of the Compton thick Seyfert 2 galaxy Mrk 3 with Suzaku
We obtained a wide-band spectrum of the Compton-thick Seyfert 2 galaxy Mrk 3
with Suzaku. The observed spectrum was clearly resolved into weak, soft
power-law emission, a heavily absorbed power-law component, cold reflection,
and many emission lines. The heavily absorbed component, absorbed by gas with a
column density of 1.1x10^24 cm^-2, has an intrinsic 2--10 keV luminosity of
~1.6x10^43 erg s^-1, and is considered to be direct emission from the Mrk 3
nucleus. The reflection component was interpreted as reflection of the direct
light off cold, thick material; the reflection fraction was 1.36+/-0.20.
The cold material is inferred to be located > 1 pc from the central black hole
of Mrk 3 due to the low ionization parameter of iron (xi < 1 erg cm s^-1) and
the narrow iron line width (s < 22 eV). A Compton shoulder to the iron line was
detected, but the intensity of the shoulder component was less than that
expected from spherically distributed Compton-thick material. The weak, soft
power-law emission is considered to be scattered light by ionized gas. The
existence of many highly-ionized lines from O, Ne, Mg, Si, S, and Fe in the
observed spectrum indicates that the ionized gas has a broad ionized structure,
with xi=10--1000. The scattering fraction with respect to the direct light was
estimated to be 0.9+/-0.2%, which indicates that the column density of the
scattering region is about 3.6x10^22 cm^-2. This high-quality spectrum obtained
by Suzaku can be considered a template for studies of Seyfert 2 galaxies.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, accepted in PASJ for publicatio
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