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Line Shifts, Broad-Line Region Inflow, And The Feeding Of Active Galactic Nuclei
Velocity-resolved reverberation mapping suggests that the broad-line regions (BLRs) of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) can have significant net inflow. We use the STOKES radiative transfer code to show that electron and Rayleigh scattering off the BLR and torus naturally explains the blueshifted profiles of high-ionization lines and the ionization dependence of the blueshifts. This result is insensitive to the geometry of the scattering region. If correct, then this model resolves the long-standing conflict between the absence of outflow implied by velocity-resolved reverberation mapping and the need for outflow if the blueshifting is the result of obscuration. The accretion rate implied by the inflow is sufficient to power the AGN. We suggest that the BLR is part of the outer accretion disk and that similar magnetohydrodynamic processes are operating. In the scattering model, the blueshifting is proportional to the accretion rate so high-accretion-rate AGNs will show greater high-ionization line blueshifts, as is observed. Scattering can lead to systematically too high black hole mass estimates from the C IV line. We note many similarities between narrow-line region (NLR) and BLR blueshiftings, and suggest that NLR blueshiftings have a similar explanation. Our model explains the higher blueshifts of broad absorption line QSOs if they are more highly inclined. Rayleigh scattering from the BLR and torus could be more important in the UV than electron scattering for predominantly neutral material around AGNs. The importance of Rayleigh scattering versus electron scattering can be assessed by comparing line profiles at different wavelengths arising from the same emission-line region.US National Science Foundation AST 03-07912, AST 08-03883Space Telescope Science Institute AR-09926.01GEMINI-CONICYT Fund of Chile 32070017FONDECYT of Chile 1120957French GdR PCHECenter for Theoretical Astrophysics (CTA) through Czech Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports LC06014ANR-11-JS56-013-01Astronom
The case for inflow of the broad-line region of active galactic nuclei
The high-ionization lines of the broad-line region (BLR) of thermal active
galactic nuclei (AGNs) show blueshifts of a few hundred km/s to several
thousand km/sec with respect to the low-ionization lines. This has long been
thought to be due to the high-ionization lines of the BLR arising in a wind of
which the far side of the outflow is blocked from our view by the accretion
disc. Evidence for and against the disc-wind model is discussed. The biggest
problem for the model is that velocity-resolved reverberation mapping
repeatedly fails to show the expected kinematic signature of outflow of the
BLR. The disc-wind model also cannot readily reproduce the red side of the line
profiles of high-ionization lines. The rapidly falling density in an outflow
makes it difficult to obtain high equivalent widths. We point out a number of
major problems with associating the BLR with the outflows producing broad
absorption lines. An explanation which avoids all these problems and satisfies
the constraints of both the line profiles and velocity-resolved
reverberation-mapping is a model in which the blueshifting is due to scattering
off material spiraling inwards with an inflow velocity of half the velocity of
the blueshifting. We discuss how recent reverberation mapping results are
consistent with the scattering-plus-inflow model but do not support a disc-wind
model. We propose that the anti-correlation of the apparent redshifting of
H with the blueshifting of CIV is a consequence of contamination of the
red wings of H by the broad wings of [O III].Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures. To appear in special issue of Astrophysics and
Space Science, "Spectral Line Shapes in Astrophysics
Hot-spot model for accretion disc variability as random process - II. Mathematics of the power-spectrum break frequency
We study some general properties of accretion disc variability in the context
of stationary random processes. In particular, we are interested in
mathematical constraints that can be imposed on the functional form of the
Fourier power-spectrum density (PSD) that exhibits a multiply broken shape and
several local maxima. We develop a methodology for determining the regions of
the model parameter space that can in principle reproduce a PSD shape with a
given number and position of local peaks and breaks of the PSD slope. Given the
vast space of possible parameters, it is an important requirement that the
method is fast in estimating the PSD shape for a given parameter set of the
model. We generated and discuss the theoretical PSD profiles of a
shot-noise-type random process with exponentially decaying flares. Then we
determined conditions under which one, two, or more breaks or local maxima
occur in the PSD. We calculated positions of these features and determined the
changing slope of the model PSD. Furthermore, we considered the influence of
the modulation by the orbital motion for a variability pattern assumed to
result from an orbiting-spot model. We suggest that our general methodology can
be useful in for describing non-monotonic PSD profiles (such as the trend seen,
on different scales, in exemplary cases of the high-mass X-ray binary Cygnus
X-1 and the narrow-line Seyfert galaxy Ark 564). We adopt a model where these
power spectra are reproduced as a superposition of several Lorentzians with
varying amplitudes in the X-ray-band light curve. Our general approach can help
in constraining the model parameters and in determining which parts of the
parameter space are accessible under various circumstances.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics accepte
Modelling the X-ray polarimetric signatures of complex geometry: the case study of the "changing look" AGN NGC 1365
"Changing look" Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are a subset of Seyfert galaxies
characterized by rapid transitions between Compton-thin and Compton-thick
regimes. In their Compton-thin state, the central engine is less obscured,
hence spectroscopy or timing observations can probe their innermost structures.
However, it is not clear if the observed emission features and the Compton hump
are associated with relativistic reflection onto the accretion disc, or complex
absorption by distant, absorbing gas clouds passing by the observer's
line-of-sight. Here, we investigate these two scenarios under the scope of
X-ray polarimetry, providing the first polarisation predictions for an
archetypal "changing look" AGN: NGC 1365. We explore the resulting polarisation
emerging from lamp-post emission and scattering off an accretion disc in the
immediate vicinity of a supermassive black hole. The computed polarisation
signatures are compared to the results of an absorption-dominated model, where
high column density gas partially covers the central source. While the shape of
the polarisation spectrum is similar, the two models differ in net polarisation
percentage, with the relativistic reflection scenario producing significantly
stronger polarisation. Additionally, the variation of the polarisation position
angle is distinctly different between both scenarios: the reflection-dominated
model produces smooth rotations of the polarisation angle with photon energy
whereas circumnuclear absorption causes an orthogonal switch of the
polarisation angle between the soft and the hard X-ray bands. By comparing the
predicted polarisation of NGC 1365 to the detectability levels of X-ray
polarimetry mission concepts proposed in the past, we demonstrate that with a
large, soft X-ray observatory or a medium-sized mission equipped with a hard (6
- 35 keV) polarimeter, the correct interpretation would be unambiguous.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices
of the Royal Astronomical Societ
The Nuclear Reddening Curve for Active Galactic Nuclei and the Shape of the Infra-Red to X-Ray Spectral Energy Distribution
We present extinction curves derived from the broad emission lines and
continua of large samples of both radio-loud and radio-quiet AGNs. The curves
are significantly flatter in the UV than are curves for the local ISM. The
reddening curves for the radio-quiet LBQS quasars are slightly steeper than
those of the radio-loud quasars in the UV, probably because of additional
reddening by dust further out in the host galaxies of the former. The UV
extinction curves for the radio-loud AGNs are very flat. This is explicable
with slight modifications to standard MRN dust models: there is a relative lack
of small grains in the nuclear dust. Our continuum and broad-emission line
reddening curves agree in both shape and amplitude, confirming that the
continuum shape is indeed profoundly affected by reddening for all but the
bluest AGNs. With correction by our generic extinction curve, all of the
radio-loud AGNs have continuous optical-UV spectra consistent with a single
shape. We show that radio-quiet AGNs have very similar intrinsic UV to optical
shape over orders of magnitude in luminosity. We also argue that radio-loud and
radio-quiet AGNs probably share the same underlying continuum shape and that
most of the systematic differences between their observed continuum shapes are
due to higher nuclear reddening in radio-selected AGNs, and additional
reddening from dust further out in the host galaxies in radio-quiet AGNs. Our
conclusions have important implications for the modelling of quasar continua
and the analysis of quasar demographics.Comment: 41 pages, including 6 figures and 3 tables. To appear in ApJ vol.
614, October 20 issue. Some slight wording changes. Some additional
references added. Small changes in the model fit in section 6.2, to the
analytical fit in the Appendix, and to the tabulated reddening curve in the
Appendi