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We present the results of hard-X-ray observations of four broad-line radio galaxies (BLRGs) with the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). The original motivation behind the observations was to search for systematic differences between the BLRGs and their radio-quiet counterparts, the Seyfert galaxies. We do, indeed, find that the Fe K-alpha lines and Compton reflection components, which are hallmarks of the X-ray spectra of Seyferts galaxies, are weaker in BLRGs by about a factor of 2. This observational result is in agreement with the conclusions of other recent studies of these objects. We examine several possible explanations for this systematic difference, including beaming of the primary X-rays away from the accretion disk, a low iron abundance, a small solid angle subtended by the disk to the primary X-ray source, and dilution of the observed spectrum by beamed X-rays from the jet. We find that a small solid angle subtended by the disk to the primary X-ray source is a viable and appealing explanation, while all others suffer from drawbacks. We interpret this as an indication of a difference in the inner accretion disk structure between Seyfert galaxies and BLRGs, namely that the inner accretion disks of BLRGs have the form of an ion-supported torus or an advection-dominated accretion flow, which irradiates the geometrically thin outer disk.
We present a study of the flux and spectral variability of the two broad-line radio galaxies (BLRGs) 3C 390.3 and 3C 120, observed almost daily with RXTE for nearly two months each in 1996 and 1997, respectively. Our original motivation for this stud
The Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer made a short (10 ks) observation of the radio galaxy Centaurus A on 14 August 1996. Analysis of the combined 2.5-240 keV spectrum has revealed a heavily absorbed(NH=9.42+/-0.24 e22 cm-2) primary power law (index=1.86+/
In X-ray binaries, rapid variability in X-ray flux of greater than an order of magnitude on time-scales of a day or less appears to be a signature of wind accretion from a supergiant companion. When the variability takes the form of rare, brief, brig
NuSTAR observatory, with its 3 - 78 keV broadband spectral coverage, enables the detections of the high-energy cutoff in a number of active galaxies, including several individual radio loud ones. In this work we present systematic and uniform analyse
In 1996 during Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) observations of SGR 1900+14, the 89-s X-ray pulsar XTE J1906+09 was discovered. As a result of monitoring campaigns of SGR 1900+14, XTE J1906+09 was also monitored regularly in 1996 September, 1998 Ma