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Probing the disk-corona systems and broad line regions of changing-look quasars with X-ray and optical observations

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 Added by Xiangyu Jin
 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Changing-look quasars are a new class of highly variable active galactic nuclei that have changed their spectral type over surprisingly short timescales of just a few years. The origin of this phenomenon is debated, but is likely to reflect some change in the accretion flow. To investigate the disk-corona systems in these objects, we measure optical/UV-X-ray spectral indices ($alpha_{rm OX}$) and Eddington ratios ($lambda_{rm Edd}$) of ten previously-discovered changing-look quasars at two or more epochs. By comparing these data with simulated results based on the behavior of X-ray binaries, we find possible similarities in spectral indices below 1% Eddington ratio. We further investigate the Eddington ratios of changing-look quasars before and after their spectral type changes, and find that changing-look quasars cross the 1% Eddington ratio boundary when their broad emission lines disappear/emerge. This is consistent with the disk-wind model as the origin of broad emission lines.

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We present the drastic transformation of the X-ray properties of the active galactic nucleus 1ES 1927+654, following a changing-look event. After the optical/UV outburst the power-law component, produced in the X-ray corona, disappeared, and the spectrum of 1ES 1927+65 instead became dominated by a blackbody component ($kTsim 80-120$ eV). This implies that the X-ray corona, ubiquitously found in AGN, was destroyed in the event. Our dense $sim 450$ day long X-ray monitoring shows that the source is extremely variable in the X-ray band. On long time scales the source varies up to $sim 4$ dex in $sim 100$ days, while on short timescales up to $sim2$ dex in $sim 8$ hours. The luminosity of the source is found to first show a strong dip down to $sim 10^{40}rm,erg,s^{-1}$, and then a constant increase in luminosity to levels exceeding the pre-outburst level $gtrsim $300 days after the optical event detection, rising up asymptotically to $sim 2times10^{44}rm,erg,s^{-1}$. As the X-ray luminosity of the source increases, the X-ray corona is recreated, and a very steep power-law component ($Gammasimeq 3$) reappears, and dominates the emission for 0.3-2 keV luminosities $gtrsim 10^{43.7}rm,erg,s^{-1}$, $sim 300$ days after the beginning of the event. We discuss possible origins of this event, and speculate that our observations could be explained by the interaction between the accretion flow and debris from a tidally disrupted star. Our results show that changing-look events can be associated with dramatic and rapid transformations of the innermost regions of accreting SMBHs.
136 - Hezhen Liu , B. Luo , W. N. Brandt 2018
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110 - J. M. Miller 2018
We present an analysis of the narrow Fe K-alpha line in Chandra/HETGS observations of the Seyfert AGN, NGC 4151. The sensitivity and resolution afforded by the gratings reveal asymmetry in this line. Models including weak Doppler boosting, gravitational red-shifts, and scattering are generally preferred over Gaussians at the 5 sigma level of confidence, and generally measure radii consistent with R ~ 500-1000 GM/c^2. Separate fits to high/unobscured and low/obscured phases reveal that the line originates at smaller radii in high flux states; model-independent tests indicate that this effect is significant at the 4-5 sigma level. Some models and Delta t ~ 2 E+4 s variations in line flux suggest that the narrow Fe K-alpha line may originate at radii as small as R ~ 50-130 GM/c^2 in high flux states. These results indicate that the narrow Fe K-alpha line in NGC 4151 is primarily excited in the innermost part of the optical broad line region (BLR), or X-ray BLR. Alternatively, a warp could provide the solid angle needed to enhance Fe K-alpha line emission from intermediate radii, and might resolve an apparent discrepancy in the inclination of the innermost and outer disk in NGC 4151. Both warps and the BLR may originate through radiation pressure, so these explanations may be linked. We discuss our results in detail, and consider the potential for future observations with Chandra, XARM, and ATHENA to measure black hole masses and to study the intermediate disk in AGN using narrow Fe K-alpha emission lines.
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