1,926 research outputs found
1ES 1927+654: Persistent and rapid X-ray variability in an AGN with low intrinsic neutral X-ray absorption and narrow optical emission lines
We present X-ray and optical observations of the X-ray bright AGN 1ES
1927+654. The X-ray observations obtained with ROSAT and Chandra reveal
persistent, rapid and large scale variations, as well as steep 0.1-2.4 keV
(Gamma = 2.6 +/- 0.3) and 0.3-7.0 keV (Gamma = 2.7 +/- 0.2) spectra. The
measured intrinsic neutral X-ray column density is approximately 7e20cm^-2. The
X-ray timing properties indicate that the strong variations originate from a
region, a few hundred light seconds from the central black hole, typical for
type 1 AGN. High quality optical spectroscopy reveals a typical Seyfert 2
spectrum with some host galaxy contamination and no evidence of Fe II
multiplets or broad hydrogen Balmer wings. The intrinsic optical extinction
derived from the BLR and NLR are A_V >= 3.7 and A_V=1.7, respectively. The
X-ray observations give an A_V value of less than 0.58, in contrast to the
optical extinction values. We discuss several ideas to explain this apparent
difference in classification including partial covering, an underluminous BLR
or a high dust to gas ratio.Comment: 8 pages including 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
XMM-Newton observations of the BL Lac MS 0737+7441
We report on the XMM-Newton observations of the BL Lac object MS 0737.9+7441
during the performance verification phase. A simple power-law fit provides an
adequate description of the integrated spectrum in the 0.2-10 keV energy band.
The photon index is slightly steeper in the EPIC pn data with 2.38+-0.01
compared to the EPIC MOS data (2.28+-0.01). The difference is most probably due
to the present uncertainties in the calibration of the EPIC MOS and EPIC pn
data sets. We report evidence for intrinsic absorption in the distant BL Lac
above the Galactic column N_H,Gal=3.2*10^20 cm^-2 which is N_H,fit(z=0.315)=
(2.70+-0.20)*10^20cm^-2 in the EPIC pn data and N_H,fit(z=0.315)=
(3.25+-0.25)*10^20cm^-2 in the EPIC MOS data assuming neutral gas and solar
abundances. The flux variations are found to be of the order of 10 %.Comment: 4 pages, 4 Figures, accepted for publication in the special A&A
Letters issue for XMM-Newto
Search for X-ray Afterglows from Gamma-Ray Bursts in the RASS
We report on a search for X-ray afterglows from gamma-ray bursts using the
ROSAT all-sky survey (RASS) data. If the emission in the soft X-ray band is
significantly less beamed than in the gamma-ray band, we expect to detect many
afterglows in the RASS. Our search procedure generated 23 afterglow candidates,
where about 4 detections are predicted. Follow-up spectroscopy of several
counterpart candidates strongly suggests a flare star origin of the RASS events
in many, if not all, cases. Given the small number of events we conclude that
the data are consistent with comparable beaming angles in the X-ray and
gamma-ray bands. Models predicting a large amount of energy emerging as a
nearly isotropic X-ray component, and a so far undetected class of ``dirty
fireballs'' and re-bursts are constrained.Comment: 5 pages, LATEX with aipproc.sty, incl. 1 ps-Fig., Proc. of the 5th
Huntsville Gamma Ray Burst Symposium, Oct. 1999, ed. R.M. Kippen, AIP; also
available at http://www.aip.de/~jcg/publis.htm
HST STIS Ultraviolet Spectral Evidence for Outflow in Extreme Narrow-line Seyfert 1 Galaxies: I. Data and Analysis
We present HST STIS observations of two extreme NLS1s, IRAS 13224-3809 and 1H
0707-495. The spectra are characterized by very blue continua, broad, strongly
blueshifted high-ionization lines (including \ion{C}{4} and \ion{N}{5}), and
narrow, symmetric intermediate- (including \ion{C}{3}], \ion{Si}{3}],
\ion{Al}{3}) and low-ionization (e.g., \ion{Mg}{2}) lines centered at their
rest wavelengths. The emission-line profiles suggest that the high-ionization
lines are produced in a wind, and the intermediate- and low-ionization lines
are produced in low-velocity gas associated with the accretion disk or base of
the wind. In this paper, we present the analysis of the spectra from these two
objects; in a companion paper we present photoionization analysis and a toy
dynamical model for the wind. The highly asymmetric profile of \ion{C}{4}
suggests that it is dominated by emission from the wind, so we develop a
template for the wind from the \ion{C}{4} line. We model the bright emission
lines in the spectra using a combination of this template, and a narrow,
symmetric line centered at the rest wavelength. We also analyzed a comparison
sample of HST spectra from 14 additional NLS1s, and construct a correlation
matrix of emission line and continuum properties. A number of strong
correlations were observed, including several involving the asymmetry of the
\ion{C}{4} line.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ with no change
An XMM-Newton observation of Ton S180: Constraints on the continuum emission in ultrasoft Seyfert galaxies
We present an XMM-Newton observation of the bright, narrow-line, ultrasoft
Seyfert 1 galaxy Ton S180. The 0.3-10 keV X-ray spectrum is steep and curved,
showing a steep slope above 2.5 keV (Gamma ~ 2.3) and a smooth, featureless
excess of emission at lower energies. The spectrum can be adequately
parameterised using a simple double power-law model. The source is strongly
variable over the course of the observation but shows only weak spectral
variability, with the fractional variability amplitude remaining approximately
constant over more than a decade in energy. The curved continuum shape and weak
spectral variability are discussed in terms of various physical models for the
soft X-ray excess emission, including reflection off the surface of an ionised
accretion disc, inverse-Compton scattering of soft disc photons by thermal
electrons, and Comptonisation by electrons with a hybrid thermal/non-thermal
distribution. We emphasise the possibility that the strong soft excess may be
produced by dissipation of accretion energy in the hot, upper atmosphere of the
putative accretion disc.Comment: 9 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
An X-ray view of Mrk 705: A borderline narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy
Mrk 705 exhibits optical properties of both narrow- and broad-line Seyfert 1
galaxies. We examine the X-ray properties of this borderline object utilising
proprietary and public data from Chandra, ASCA, ROSAT and RXTE, spanning more
than twelve years. Though long-term flux variability from the pointed
observations appears rather modest (about 3 times), we do find examples of rare
large amplitude outbursts in the RXTE monitoring data. There is very little
evidence of long-term spectral variability as the low- and high-energy spectra
appear constant with time. A 6.4 keV emission line is detected in the ASCA
spectra of Mrk 705, but not during the later, higher flux state Chandra
observation. However, the upper limit on the equivalent width of a line in the
Chandra spectrum is consistent with a constant-flux emission line and a
brighter continuum, suggesting that the line is emitted from distant material
such as the putative torus. Overall, the X-ray properties of Mrk 705 appear
typical of BLS1 activity.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A (Research Note
Spectropolarimetry of the Luminous Narrow-Line Seyfert Galaxies IRAS 20181-2244 and IRAS 13224-3809
We observed the narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies IRAS 20181-2244 and IRAS
13324-3809 with a new spectropolarimeter on the RC spectrograph at the CTIO 4m
telescope. Previously it had been suggested that IRAS 20181-2244 was a Type 2
QSO and thus might contain an obscured broad-line region which could be
detected by the presence of broad Balmer lines in the polarized flux. We found
the object to be polarized at about 2%, and constant with wavelength, (unlike
most narrow-line Seyfert 1s), but with no evidence of broad Balmer lines in
polarized flux. The spectropolarimetry indicates that the scattering material
is inside the BLR. IRAS 13224-3809, notable for its high variability in X-ray
and UV wavelengths, has a low polarization consistent with a Galactic
interstellar origin.Comment: 19 pages using (AASTEX) aaspp4.sty and 5 postscript figures To be
published in the Astrophysical Journa
- …