No Arabic abstract
The fundamental nature and extent of the coronal line region (CLR), which may serve as a vital tracer for Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) activity, remain unresolved. Previous studies suggest that the CLR is produced by AGN-driven outflows and occupies a distinct region between the broad line region and the narrow line region, which places it tens to hundreds of parsecs from the galactic center. Here, we investigate 10 coronal line (CL; ionization potential $ge$ 100 eV) emitting galaxies from the SDSS-IV MaNGA catalog with emission from one or more CLs detected at $ge$ $5{sigma}$ above the continuum in at least 10 spaxels - the largest such MaNGA catalog. We find that the CLR is far more extended, reaching out to 1.3 - 23 kpc from the galactic center. We cross-match our sample of 10 CL galaxies with the largest existing MaNGA AGN catalog and identify 7 in it; two of the remaining three are galaxy mergers and the final one is an AGN candidate. Further, we measure the average CLR electron temperatures to range between 12,331 K - 22,530 K, slightly above the typical threshold for pure AGN photoionization ($sim$ 20,000 K) and indicative of shocks (e.g., merger-induced or from supernova remnants) in the CLR. We reason that ionizing photons emitted by the central continuum source (i.e. AGN photoionization) primarily generate the CLs, and that energetic shocks are an additional ionization mechanism that likely produce the most extended CLRs we measure.
We present the first extensive study of the coronal line variability in an active galaxy. Our data set for the nearby source NGC 4151 consists of six epochs of quasi-simultaneous optical and near-infrared spectroscopy spanning a period of about eight years and five epochs of X-ray spectroscopy overlapping in time with it. None of the coronal lines showed the variability behaviour observed for the broad emission lines and hot dust emission. In general, the coronal lines varied only weakly, if at all. Using the optical [Fe VII] and X-ray O VII emission lines we estimate that the coronal line gas has a relatively low density of n~10^3 cm^-3 and a relatively high ionisation parameter of log U~1. The resultant distance of the coronal line gas from the ionising source is about two light years, which puts this region well beyond the hot inner face of the obscuring dusty torus. The high ionisation parameter implies that the coronal line region is an independent entity rather than part of a continuous gas distribution connecting the broad and narrow emission line regions. We present tentative evidence for the X-ray heated wind scenario of Pier & Voit. We find that the increased ionising radiation that heats the dusty torus also increases the cooling efficiency of the coronal line gas, most likely due to a stronger adiabatic expansion.
Using VLTI/GRAVITY and SINFONI data, we investigate the sub-pc gas and dust structure around the nearby type 1 AGN hosted by NGC 3783. The K-band coverage of GRAVITY uniquely allows a simultaneous analysis of the size and kinematics of the broad line region (BLR), the size and structure of the near-IR continuum emitting hot dust, and the size of the coronal line region (CLR). We find the BLR probed through broad Br$gamma$ emission is well described by a rotating, thick disk with a radial distribution of clouds peaking in the inner region. In our BLR model the physical mean radius of 16 light days is nearly twice the 10 day time lag that would be measured, which matches very well the 10 day time lag that has been measured by reverberation mapping. We measure a hot dust FWHM size of 0.74 mas (0.14 pc) and further reconstruct an image of the hot dust which reveals a faint (5% of the total flux) offset cloud which we interpret as an accreting cloud heated by the central AGN. Finally, we directly measure the FWHM size of the nuclear CLR as traced by the [CaVIII] and narrow Br$gamma$ line. We find a FWHM size of 2.2 mas (0.4 pc), fully in line with the expectation of the CLR located between the BLR and narrow line region. Combining all of these measurements together with larger scale near-IR integral field unit and mid-IR interferometry data, we are able to comprehensively map the structure and dynamics of gas and dust from 0.01--100 pc.
We present the second extensive study of the coronal line variability in an active galaxy. Our data set for the well-studied Seyfert galaxy NGC 5548 consists of five epochs of quasi-simultaneous optical and near-infrared spectroscopy spanning a period of about five years and three epochs of X-ray spectroscopy overlapping in time with it. Whereas the broad emission lines and hot dust emission varied only moderately, the coronal lines varied strongly. However, the observed high variability is mainly due to a flux decrease. Using the optical [FeVII] and X-ray OVII emission lines we estimate that the coronal line gas has a relatively low density of n~10^3/cm^3 and a relatively high ionisation parameter of log U~1. The resultant distance of the coronal line gas from the ionising source of about eight light years places this region well beyond the hot inner face of the dusty torus. These results imply that the coronal line region is an independent entity. We find again support for the X-ray heated wind scenario of Pier & Voit; the increased ionising radiation that heats the dusty torus also increases the cooling efficiency of the coronal line gas, most likely due to a stronger adiabatic expansion. The much stronger coronal line variability of NGC 5548 relative to that of NGC 4151 can also be explained within this picture. NGC 5548 has much stronger coronal lines relative to the low ionisation lines than NGC 4151 indicating a stronger wind, in which case a stronger adiabatic expansion of the gas and so fading of the line emission is expected.
We analyse the 6.4 keV iron line component produced in the Galactic Center (GC) region by cosmic rays in dense molecular clouds (MCs) and in the diffuse molecular gas. We showed that this component, in principle, can be seen in several years in the direction of the cloud Srg B2. If this emission is produced by low energy CRs which ionize the interstellar molecular gas the intensity of the line is quite small, < 1%. However, we cannot exclude that local sources of CRs or X-ray photons nearby the cloud may provide much higher intensity of the line from there. Production of the line emission from molecular clouds depends strongly on processes of CR penetration into them. We show that turbulent motions of neutral gas may generate strong magnetic fluctuations in the clouds which prevent free penetration of CRs into the clouds from outside. We provide a special analysis of the line production by high energy electrons. We concluded that these electrons hardly provide the diffuse 6.4 keV line emission from the GC because their density is depleted by ionization losses. We do not exclude that local sources of electrons may provide an excesses of the 6.4 keV line emission in some molecular clouds and even reproduce a relatively short time variations of the iron line emission. However, we doubt whether a single electron source provides the simultaneous short time variability of the iron line emission from clouds which are distant from each other on hundred pc as observed for the GC clouds. An alternative speculation is that local electron sources could also provide the necessary effect of the line variations in different clouds that are seen simultaneously by chance that seems, however, very unlikely.
We present an analysis of STIS/HST optical spectra of a sample of ten Seyfert galaxies aimed at studying the structure and physical properties of the coronal-line region (CLR). The high-spatial resolution provided by STIS allowed us to resolve the CLR and obtain key information about the kinematics of the coronal-line gas, measure directly its spatial scale, and study the mechanisms that drive the high-ionisation lines. We find CLRs extending from just a few parsecs (~10 pc) up to 230 pc in radius, consistent with the bulk of the coronal lines (CLs) originating between the BLR and NLR, and extending into the NLR in the case of [FeVII] and [NeV] lines. The CL profiles strongly vary with the distance to the nucleus. We observed line splitting in the core of some of the galaxies. Line peak shifts, both red- and blue-shifts, typically reached 500 km/s, and even higher velocities (1000 km/s) in some of the galaxies. In general, CLs follow the same pattern of rotation curves as low-ionisation lines like [OIII]. From a direct comparison between the radio and the CL emission we find that neither the strength nor the kinematics of the CLs scale in any obvious and strong way with the radio jets. Moreover, the similarity of the flux distributions and kinematics of the CLs and low-ionisation lines, the low temperatures derived for the gas, and the success of photoionisation models to reproduce, within a factor of few, the observed line ratios, point towards photoionisation as the main driving mechanism of CLs.