17,236 research outputs found
Are there reliable methods to estimate the nuclear orientation of Seyfert galaxies?
Orientation, together with accretion and evolution, is one of the three main
drivers in the Grand Unification of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN). Being
unresolved, determining the true inclination of those powerful sources is
always difficult and indirect, yet it remains a vital clue to apprehend the
numerous, panchromatic and complex spectroscopic features we detect. There are
only a hundred inclinations derived so far; in this context, can we be sure
that we measure the true orientation of AGN? To answer this question, four
methods to estimate the nuclear inclination of AGN are investigated and
compared to inclination-dependent observables (hydrogen column density, Balmer
linewidth, optical polarization, and flux ratios within the IR and relative to
X-rays). Among these orientation indicators, the method developed by Fisher,
Crenshaw, Kraemer et al., mapping and modeling the radial velocities of the [O
iii] emission region in AGN, is the most successful. The [O iii]-mapping
technique shows highly statistically significant correlations at >95%
confidence level for rejecting null hypothesis for all the test cases. Such
results confirm that the Unified Model is correct at a scale ranging from
kiloparsec to a fraction of a parsec. However, at a radial distance less than
0.01 pc from the central black hole, warps and misalignments may change this
picture.Comment: 33 pages, 11 figures, 11 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
X-ray polarization fluctuations induced by cloud eclipses in active galactic nuclei
Context: A fraction of active galactic nuclei (AGN) show dramatic X-ray
spectral changes on the day-to-week time scales associated with variation in
the line of sight of the cold absorber. Aims: We intend to model the
polarization fluctuations arising from an obscuration event, thereby offering a
method of determining whether flux variations are due to occultation or extreme
intrinsic emission variability. Methods: Undertaking 1 - 100 keV polarimetric
simulations with the Monte Carlo code STOKES, we simulated the journey of a
variety of cold gas clouds in front of an extended primary source. We varied
the hydrogen column density nH and size of the absorber, as well as the initial
polarization state of the emitting source, to cover a wide range of scenarios.
Results: For unpolarized primary fluxes, large (about 50deg) variations of the
polarization position angle psi are expected before and after an occultation
event, which is associated with very low residual polarization degrees (P lower
than 1 per cent). In the case of an emitting disk with intrinsic,
position-independent polarization, and for a given range of parameters, X-ray
eclipses significantly alter the observed polarization spectra, with most of
the variations seen in psi. Finally, non-uniformly polarized emitting regions
produce very distinctive polarization variations due to the successive covering
and uncovering of different portions of the disk. Plotted against time,
variations in P and psi form detectable P~Cygni type profiles that are
distinctive signatures of non-axisymmetric emission. Conclusions: Polarization
measurements are thus particularly adapted to distinguish between intrinsic
intensity fluctuations and external eclipsing events, constrain the geometry of
the covering medium, and test the hypothesis of non-uniformly emitting disks
predicted by general relativity.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
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