3 research outputs found

    NuSTAR Hard X-ray View of Low-luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei: High-energy Cutoff and Truncated Thin Disk

    Full text link
    We report the analysis of simultaneous XMM-Newton+NuSTAR observations of two low-luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei (LLAGN), NGC 3998 and NGC 4579. We do not detect any significant variability in either source over the ~3 day length of the NuSTAR observations. The broad-band 0.5-60 keV spectrum of NGC 3998 is best fit with a cutoff power-law, while the one for NGC 4579 is best fit with a combination of a hot thermal plasma model, a power-law, and a blend of Gaussians to fit an Fe complex observed between 6 and 7 keV. Our main spectral results are the following: (1) neither source shows any reflection hump with a 3σ3\sigma reflection fraction upper-limits R<0.3R<0.3 and R<0.18R<0.18 for NGC 3998 and NGC 4579, respectively; (2) the 6-7 keV line complex in NGC 4579 could either be fit with a narrow Fe K line at 6.4 keV and a moderately broad Fe XXV line, or 3 relatively narrow lines, which includes contribution from Fe XXVI; (3) NGC 4579 flux is 60% brighter than previously detected with XMM-Newton, accompanied by a hardening in the spectrum; (4) we measure a cutoff energy Ecut=107−18+27E_{\rm cut}=107_{-18}^{+27} keV in NGC 3998, which represents the lowest and best constrained high-energy cutoff ever measured for an LLAGN; (5) NGC 3998 spectrum is consistent with a Comptonization model with either a sphere (τ≈3±1\tau\approx3\pm1) or slab (τ≈1.2±0.6\tau\approx1.2\pm0.6) geometry, corresponding to plasma temperatures between 20 and 150 keV. We discuss these results in the context of hard X-ray emission from bright AGN, other LLAGN, and hot accretion flow models.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in Ap

    NuStar Hard X-Ray View of Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei: High-Energy Cutoff and Truncated Thin Disk

    Get PDF
    We report the analysis of simultaneous XMM-Newton+Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) observations of two low-luminosity active galactic nuclei (LLAGNs), NGC3998 and NGC4579. We do not detect any significant variability in either source over the 3 day length of the NuSTAR observations. The broadband 0.560 keV spectrum of NGC3998 is best fit with a cutoff power law, while the one for NGC4579 is best fit with a combination of a hot thermal plasma model, a power law, and a blend of Gaussians to fit an Fe complex observed between 6 and 7 keV. Our main spectral results are the following: (1) neither source shows any reflection hump with 3 reflection fraction upper limits of R < 0.3 and R < 0.18 for NGC3998 and NGC4579, respectively; (2) the 67 keV line complex in NGC4579 could be fit with either a narrow Fe K line at 6.4 keV and a moderately broad Fe XXV line or with three relatively narrow lines, which include contribution from Fe XXVI; (3) the NGC4579 flux is 60% brighter than previously detected with XMM-Newton, accompanied by a hardening in the spectrum; (4) we measure a cutoff energy = - E 107+ cut 18 27 keV in NGC3998, which represents the lowest and best constrained high-energy cutoff ever measured for an LLAGN; (5) the NGC3998 spectrum is consistent with a Comptonization model with either a sphere ( 3 1) or slab ( 1.2 0.6) geometry, corresponding to plasma temperatures between 20 and 150 keV. We discuss these results in the context of hard X-ray emission from bright AGNs, other LLAGNs, and hot accretion flow models
    corecore