The most intense monitoring observations yet made in the optical (UBV) and
near-infrared (JHK) wave bands were carried out for nearby Seyfert1 galaxies of
NGC 5548, NGC 4051, NGC 3227, and NGC 7469. Over three years of observations
with MAGNUM telescope since early 2001, clear time-delayed response of the
K-band flux variations to the V-band flux variations was detected for all of
these galaxies. Their H-K color temperature was estimated to be 1500-1800 K
from the observed flux variation gradients, which supports a view that the bulk
of the K flux should originate in the thermal radiation of hot dust that
surrounds the central engine. Cross-correlation analysis was performed to
quantify the lag time corresponding to the light-travel distance of the hot
dust region from the central engine. The measured lag time is 47-53 days for
NGC 5548, 11-18 days for NGC 4051, about 20 days for NGC 3227, and 65-87 days
for NGC 7469. We found that the lag time is tightly correlated with the optical
luminosity as expected from dust reverberation (Δt∝L0.5),
while only weakly with the central virial mass, which suggests that an inner
radius of the dust torus around the active nucleus has a one-to-one
correspondence to central luminosity. In the lag time versus central luminosity
diagram, the K-band lag times place an upper boundary on the similar lag times
of broad-emission lines in the literature. This not only supports the unified
scheme of AGNs, but also implies a physical transition from the BLR out to the
dust torus that encircles the BLR. Furthermore, our V-band flux variations of
NGC 5548 on timescales of up to 10 days are found to correlate with X-ray
variations and delay behind them by one or two days, indicating the thermal
reprocessing of X-ray emission by the central accretion flow.Comment: ApJ, March 2006, v639 issue, 24 pages, 33 figures, 10 table