1,976 research outputs found
ASCA Observations of the Seyfert 2 Galaxy NGC 7582: An Obscured and Scattered View of the Hidden Nucleus
ASCA observations of the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 7582 revealed it was highly
variable on the timescale of s in the hard X-ray (2-10 keV)
band, while the soft X-ray (0.5-2 keV) flux remained constant during the
observations.
The spectral analysis suggests that this object is seen through an obscuring
torus with the thickness of N. The
hard X-ray is an absorbed direct continuum from a hidden Seyfert 1 nucleus; the
soft X-ray is dominated by the scattered central continuum from an extended
spatial region. Thus we have an obscured/absorbed and a scattered view of this
source as expected from the unification model for Seyfert galaxies.
More interestingly, the inferred X-ray column was observed to increase by
from 1994 to 1996, suggesting a ``patchy''
torus structure, namely the torus might be composed of many individual clouds.
The observed iron line feature near 6.4 keV with the equivalent width of 170 eV
is also consistent with the picture of the transmission of nuclear X-ray
continuum through a non-uniform torus.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. To be appear in PASJ 50 No.5 (1998 Oct.25 issue
The ASCA X-ray spectrum of the powerful radio galaxy 3C109
We report the results from an ASCA X-ray observation of the powerful Broad
Line Radio Galaxy, 3C109. The ASCA spectra confirm our earlier ROSAT detection
of intrinsic X-ray absorption associated with the source. The absorbing
material obscures a central engine of quasar-like luminosity. The luminosity is
variable, having dropped by a factor of two since the ROSAT observations 4
years before. The ASCA data also provide evidence for a broad iron emission
line from the source, with an intrinsic FWHM of ~ 120,000 km/s. Interpreting
the line as fluorescent emission from the inner parts of an accretion disk, we
can constrain the inclination of the disk to be degree, and the inner
radius of the disk to be Schwarzschild radii. Our results support
unified schemes for active galaxies, and demonstrate a remarkable similarity
between the X-ray properties of this powerful radio source, and those of lower
luminosity, Seyfert 1 galaxies.Comment: MNRAS in press. 7 pages, 5 figures in MNRAS LaTex styl
Warm absorber, reflection and Fe K line in the X-ray spectrum of IC 4329A
Results from the X-ray spectral analysis of the ASCA PV phase observation of
the Seyfert 1 galaxy IC 4329A are presented. We find that the 0.4 - 10 keV
spectrum of IC 4329A is best described by the sum of a steep () power-law spectrum passing through a warm absorber plus a strong
reflection component and associated Fe K line, confirming recent results
(Madejski et al. 1995, Mushotsky et al. 1995). Further cold absorption in
excess of the Galactic value and covering the entire source is also required by
the data, consistent with the edge-on galactic disk and previous X-ray
measurements. The effect of the warm absorber at soft X-ray energies is best
parameterized by two absorption edges, one consistent with OVI, OVII or NVII,
the other consistent with OVIII. A description of the soft excess in terms of
blackbody emission, as observed in some other Seyfert 1 galaxies, is ruled out
by the data. A large amount of reflection is detected in both the GIS and SIS
detectors, at similar intensities. We find a strong correlation between the
amount of reflection and the photon index, but argue that the best solution
with the present data is that given by the best statistical fit. The model
dependence of the Fe K line parameters is also discussed. Our best fit gives a
slightly broad ( keV) and redshifted (E keV) Fe K line, with equivalent width 89 33 eV.
The presence of a weak Fe K line with a strong reflection can be reconciled if
one assumes iron underabundances or ionized reflection. We also have modeled
the line with a theoretical line profile produced by an accretion disk. This
yields results in better agreement with the constraints obtained from the
reflection component.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal, 10th February
1996 issue; 24 pages and 8 figures + 1 table tared, compressed and uuencoded
(with uufiles
On broad iron K-alpha lines in Seyfert 1 galaxies
The X-ray spectrum obtained by Tanaka et al from a long observation of the
active galaxy MCG shows a broad iron K line skewed to low
energies. The simplest interpretation of the shape of the line is that it is
due to doppler and gravitational redshifts from the inner parts of a disk about
a massive black hole. Similarly broad lines are evident in shorter observations
of several other active galaxies. In this paper we investigate other line
broadening and skewing mechanisms such as Comptonization in cold gas and
doppler shifts from outflows. We have also fitted complex spectral models to
the data of MCG to see whether the broad skewed line can be mimicked
well by other absorption or emission features. No satisfactory mechanism or
spectral model is found, thus strengthening the relativistic disk line model.Comment: uuencoded compressed postscript. The preprint is also available at
http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/preprint/PrePrint.htm
The variable OVIII Warm Absorber in MCG-6-30-15
We present the results of a 4 day ASCA observation of the Seyfert galaxy
MCG-6-30-15, focussing on the nature of the X-ray absorption by the warm
absorber, characterizd by the K-edges of the intermediately ionized oxygen,
OVII and OVIII. We confirm that the column density of OVIII changes on a
timescale of ~s when the X-ray continuum flux decreases. The
significant anti-correlation of column density with continuum flux gives direct
evidence that the warm absorber is photoionized by the X-ray continuum. From
the timescale of the variation of the OVIII column density, we estimate that it
originates from gas within a radius of about 10^{17}\cm of the central
engine. In contrast, the depth of the OVII edge shows no response to the
continuum flux, which indicates that it originates in gas at larger radii. Our
results strongly suggest that there are two warm absorbing regions; one located
near or within the Broad Line Region, the other associated with the outer
molecular torus, scattering medium or Narrow Line Region.Comment: 8 pages (including figures) uuencoded gziped PS file. Submitted to
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japa
Electron-phonon interaction in transition metal diborides TB_2 (T=Zr, Nb, Ta) studied by point-contact spectroscopy
The electron-phonon interaction (EPI) in transition metal diborides TB_2
(T=Zr, Nb, Ta) is investigated by point-contact (PC) spectroscopy. The PC EPI
functions were recovered and the EPI parameters lambda<0.1 were estimated for
all three compounds. Common and distinctive features between the EPI functions
for those diborides are discussed also in connection with the superconductivity
in MgB_2.Comment: V2: minor changes, Ref.[21] added, publ. in PR
Extrinsic Spin Hall Effect Induced by Iridium Impurities in Copper
We study the extrinsic spin Hall effect induced by Ir impurities in Cu by
injecting a pure spin current into a CuIr wire from a lateral spin valve
structure. While no spin Hall effect is observed without Ir impurity, the spin
Hall resistivity of CuIr increases linearly with the impurity concentration.
The spin Hall angle of CuIr, % throughout the concentration
range between 1% and 12%, is practically independent of temperature. These
results represent a clear example of predominant skew scattering extrinsic
contribution to the spin Hall effect in a nonmagnetic alloy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
RE J2248-511 - Not all variable, ultrasoft, X-ray AGN have narrow Balmer lines
We present ASCA data on RE J2248-511, extending existing optical and soft
X-ray coverage to 10 keV, and monitoring the soft component. These data show
that, despite a very strong ultrasoft X-ray excess below 0.3 keV and a soft
0.3--2 keV spectral index in earlier ROSAT data, the hard X-ray spectrum
(alpha~ -0.8; 0.6-10 keV) is typical of type 1 AGN, and the soft component has
since disappeared. Optical data taken at two different epochs show that the big
blue bump is also highly variable. The strength of the ultrasoft X-ray
component and the extreme variability in RE J2248-511 are reminiscent of the
behaviour observed in many narrow line Seyfert 1s (NLS1s). However, the high
energy end of the ROSAT spectrum, the ASCA spectrum and the Balmer line full
widths at half maximum of ~3000 km/s in RE J2248-511, are typical of normal
Seyfert 1 AGN.
The change in the soft X-ray spectrum as observed in the ROSAT and ASCA data
is consistent with the behaviour of Galactic Black Hole Candidates (GBHCs) as
they move from a high to a low state, ie. a fall in the ultrasoft component and
a hardening of the X-ray continuum. This GBHC analogy has also been proposed
for NLS1s. Alternatively, the variability may be caused by opacity changes in a
hot, optically-thin corona which surrounds a cold, dense accretion disc; this
was first suggested by Guainazzi et al. for 1H0419-577, an object which shows
remarkably similar properties to RE J2248-511.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for Monthly Notices of RA
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