328 research outputs found
A simultaneous XMM-Newton and BeppoSAX observation of the archetypal Broad Line Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 5548
We report the spectral analysis of a long XMM-Newton observation of the
well-studied, moderate luminosity Broad Line Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 5548. The
source was at an historically average brightness and we find the hard (3-10
keV) spectrum can be well fitted by a power law of photon index gamma ~ 1.75,
together with reflection. The only feature in the hard X-ray spectrum is a
narrow emission line near 6.4 keV, with an equivalent width of ~ 60 eV. The
energy and strength of this line is consistent with fluorescence from `neutral'
iron distant from the central continuum source. We find no evidence for a broad
Fe K line, with an upper limit well below previous reports, suggesting the
inner accretion disc is now absent or highly ionised. The addition of
simultaneous BeppoSAX data allows the analysis to be extended to 200 keV,
yielding important constraints on the total reflection. Extrapolation of the
hard X-ray power law down to 0.3 keV shows a clear `soft excess' below ~ 0.7
keV. After due allowance for the effects of a complex warm absorber, measured
with the XMM-Newton RGS, we find the soft excess is better described as a
smooth upward curvature in the continuum flux below ~ 2 keV. The soft excess
can be modelled either by Comptonised thermal emission or by enhanced
reflection from the surface of a highly ionised disc.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, accepted by MNRAS; minor changes to text and
figure
Fe K emission and absorption features in XMM-Newton spectra of Mkn 766 - evidence for reprocessing in flare ejecta
We report on the analysis of a long XMM-Newton EPIC observation in 2001 May
of the Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy Mkn 766. The 3-11 keV spectrum exhibits a
moderately steep power law continuum, with a broad emission line at ~6.7 keV,
probably blended with a narrow line at ~6.4 keV, and a broad absorption trough
above ~8.7 keV. We identify both broad spectral features with reprocessing in
He-like Fe. An earlier XMM-Newton observation of Mkn 766 in 2000 May, when the
source was a factor ~2 fainter, shows a similar broad emission line, but with a
slightly flatter power law and absorption at a lower energy. In neither
observation do we find a requirement for the previously reported broad 'red
wing' to the line and hence of reflection from the innermost accretion disc.
More detailed examination of the longer XMM-Newton observation reveals evidence
for rapid spectral variability in the Fe K band, apparently linked with the
occurrence of X-ray 'flares'. A reduction in the emission line strength and
increased high energy absorption during the X-ray flaring suggests that these
transient effects are due to highly ionised ejecta associated with the flares.
Simple scaling from the flare avalanche model proposed for the luminous QSO PDS
456 (Reeves etal. 2002) confirms the feasibility of coherent flaring being the
cause of the strong peaks seen in the X-ray light curve of \mkn.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, submitted to MNRA
Suzaku observations of Markarian 335: evidence for a distributed reflector
We report on a 151 ks net exposure Suzaku observation of the Narrow Line
Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 335. The 0.5-40 keV spectrum contains a broad Fe line, a
strong soft excess below about 2 keV and a Compton hump around 20-30 keV. We
find that a model consisting of a power law and two reflectors provides the
best fit to the time-averaged spectrum. In this model, an ionized, heavily
blurred, inner reflector produces most of the soft excess, while an almost
neutral outer reflector (outside ~40 r_g) produces most of the Fe line
emission. The spectral variability of the observation is characterised by
spectral hardening at very low count rates. In terms of our power-law +
two-reflector model it seems like this hardening is mainly caused by pivoting
of the power law. The rms spectrum of the entire observation has the curved
shape commonly observed in AGN, although the shape is significantly flatter
when an interval which does not contain any deep dip in the lightcurve is
considered. We also examine a previous 133 ks XMM-Newton observation of Mrk
335. We find that the XMM-Newton spectrum can be fitted with a similar
two-reflector model as the Suzaku data and we confirm that the rms spectrum of
the observation is flat. The flat rms spectra, as well as the high-energy data
from the Suzaku PIN detector, disfavour an absorption origin for the soft
excess in Mrk 335.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Resonant Absorption in the AGN spectra emerging from photoionized gas: differences between steep and flat ionizing continua
We present photoionization models accounting for both photoelectric and
resonant absorption. Resonance absorption lines from C, O, Ne, Mg, Si S and Fe
between 0.1 and 10 keV are treated. In particular we consider the complex of
almost 60 strong Fe L absorption lines around 1 keV. We calculate profiles,
intensities and equivalent widths of each line, considering both Doppler and
natural broadening mechanisms. Doppler broadening includes a term accounting
for turbulence of the gas along the line of sight. We computed spectra
transmitted by gas illuminated by drastically different ionizing continua and
compared them to spectra observed in flat X-ray spectrum, broad optical
emission line type 1 AGN, and steep X-ray spectrum, narrow optical emission
line type 1 AGN. We show that the keV absorption feature observed in
moderate resolution X-ray spectra of several Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxies can
be explained by photoionization models, taking into account for resonance
absorption, without requiring relativistic outflowing velocities of the gas, if
the physical properties of these absorbers are close to those found in flat
X-ray spectrum Seyfert 1 galaxies.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication on Ap
The Radio Quiescence of Active Galaxies with High Accretion Rates
We present 6 cm Very Large Array observations of the Greene & Ho (2004)
sample of 19 low-mass active galaxies with high accretion rates. This is one of
the only studies of a uniform sample of narrow-line Seyfert 1 (NLS1) galaxies
with such high sensitivity and resolution. Although we detect only one source,
the entire sample is very radio-quiet down to strong limits. GH10 was found to
have a radio power of 8.5 x 10^21 W/Hz, and a ratio R = f(6 cm)/f(4400 A) of
2.8. The 3 sigma upper limits for the remaining nondetections correspond to
radio powers from 3 x 10^20 to 8 x 10^21 W/Hz and 0.47 < R <9.9. Stacking all
nondetections yields an even stronger upper limit of R < 0.27. An assessment of
existing observations in the literature confirms our finding that NLS1s are
consistently radio-quiet, with a radio-loud fraction of 0%-6%, which is
significantly lower than the 10%-20% observed in the general quasar population.
By analogy with stellar-mass black holes, we argue that AGNs undergo a state
transition at L_bol/L_Edd~0.01. Below this value a radiatively inefficient
accretion flow effectively drives an outflow, which disappears when the flow
turns into an optically thick, geometrically thin disk, or a radiation
pressure-dominated slim disk at still higher L_bol/L_Edd.Comment: To appear in ApJ; 8 pages, 3 figures; uses emulateapj5.st
BATSE Observations of the Piccinotti Sample of AGN
BATSE Earth occultation data have been used to search for emission in the
20-100 keV band from all sources in the Piccinotti sample, which represents to
date the only complete 2-10 keV survey of the extragalactic sky down to a
limiting flux of 3.1 x 10^(-11) erg cm^(-2)$ s^(-1). Nearly four years of
observations have been analyzed to reach a 5sigma sensitivity level of about
7.8x 10^(-11) erg cm^(-2) s^(-1) in the band considered. Of the 36 sources in
the sample, 14 have been detected above 5sigma confidence level while marginal
detection (3<sigma<5) can be claimed for 13 sources; for 9 objects 2sigma upper
limits are reported. Comparison of BATSE results with data at higher energies
is used to estimate the robustness of our data analysis: while the detection
level of each source is reliable, the flux measurement maybe overestimated in
some sources by as much as 35%, probably due to incomplete data cleaning.
Comparison of BATSE fluxes with X-ray fluxes, obtained in the 2-10 keV range
and averaged over years, indicates that a canonical power law of photon index
1.7 gives a good description of the broad band spectra of bright AGNs and that
spectral breaks preferentially occur above 100 keV.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication on Apj
Proto-Quasars:Physical States and Observable Properties
Based on the radiation hydrodynamical model for the black hole(BH)
growth,incorporated with the chemical evolution of the early-type host galaxy,
we construct the coevolution model of a QSO BH and the host galaxy. As a
result, it is found that after a galactic wind epoch,the luminosity is shifted
from the host-dominant phase to the AGN-dominant phase (QSO phase) in the
timescale of a few years.The former phase corresponds to the early
stage of growing BH, and can be regarded as a ``proto-QSO'' phase. It has
observable characteristic properties (detail inthis paper).By comparing these
predictions with recent observations, radio galaxies are a possible candidate
for proto-QSOs.Also, it is anticipated that the proto-QSO phase is preceded by
an optically thick phase, which may correspond to ULIRGs.In this phase, is predicted to be much less than and grow with
metallicity.Moreover, as precursors of ULIRGs, optically-thin star-forming
galaxies are predicted. These may be in the assembly phase of Lyman break
galaxies (LBGs) or Ly emitters.Comment: 7pages,7figures,accepted for publication in Ap
The Host Galaxies of Narrow-Line Seyfert 1s: Evidence for Bar-Driven Fueling
We present a study of the host-galaxy morphologies of narrow- and broad-line
Seyfert 1 galaxies (NLS1s and BLS1s) based on broad-band optical images from
the Hubble Space Telescope archives. We find that large-scale stellar bars,
starting at ~1 kpc from the nucleus, are much more common in NLS1s than BLS1s.
Furthermore, the fraction of NLS1 spirals that have bars increases with
decreasing full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) of the broad component of H-beta.
These results suggest a link between the large-scale bars, which can support
high fueling rates to the inner kpc, and the high mass-accretion rates
associated with the supermassive black holes in NLS1s.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures (1a, 1b, 2, and 3), Accepted for publication in
the Astronomical Journa
Chandra Grating Spectroscopy of the Seyfert Galaxy Ton S180
This paper presents results from spectral observations of Ton S180 using
Chandra and ASCA. The data confirm the presence of the soft excess but the
Chandra LETG spectrum reveals it to be broad and smooth, rather than resolved
into individual emission lines. This excess may represent either a primary or
reprocessed continuum component or a blend of broad lines from an ionized
accretion disk. The occurrence of a similar feature in five other NLSy1s leads
us to conclude that this soft X-ray component may be a characteristic of
sources accreting at a very high rate. The X-ray spectrum shows no evidence for
absorption lines, indicating that if gas exists in the line-of-sight then it is
in a very high ionization-state or has an extremely broad velocity
distribution. The new ASCA data confirm that the narrow component of the Fe
Kalpha line peaks close to a rest-energy of 7 keV, indicating the presence of a
significant amount of highly-ionized material in the nuclear environs.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures. LaTeX with postscript figures. Accepted for
publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter
Multiwavelength Monitoring of the Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 Galaxy Akn 564. I. ASCA Observations and the Variability of the X-ray Spectral Components
We present a 35 day ASCA observation of the NLS1 Akn 564, which was part of a
multiwavelength AGN Watch monitoring campaign. Akn 564 shows a photon index
varying across the range 2.45--2.72. The presence of the soft hump component
below 1 keV, previously detected in ASCA data, is confirmed. Time-resolved
spectroscopy with ~daily sampling reveals a distinction in the variability of
the soft hump and power-law components over a timescale of weeks, with the hump
varying by a factor of 6 across the 35-day observation compared to a factor 4
in the power-law. Flux variations in the power-law component are measured down
to a timescale of ~1000s and accompanying spectral variability suggests the
soft hump is not well-correlated with the power-law on such short timescales.
We detect Fe Ka and a blend of Fe Kb plus Ni Ka, indicating an origin in highly
ionized gas. Variability measurements constrain the bulk of the Fe Ka to
originate within a light week of the nucleus. The large EW of the emission
lines may be due to high metallicity in NLS1s, supporting some evolutionary
models for AGN.Comment: 41 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal (v3 has final fixes for publication
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