ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Balmer and He I absorption in the nuclear spectrum of NGC 4151

72   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل J. B. Hutchings
 تاريخ النشر 2002
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Spectra taken with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) allow accurate location and extraction of the nuclear spectrum of NGC 4151, with minimal contamination by extended line emission and circumnuclear starlight. Spectra since 1997 show that the P Cygni Balmer and He I absorption seen previously in low nuclear states, is present in higher states, with outflow velocity that changes with the nuclear flux. The phenomenon is discussed in terms of some of the absorbers seen in the UV resonance lines, and outflows from the central source and surrounding torus.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We report on variable helium absorption lines in NGC 4151 observed across six epochs of quasi-simultaneous near-infrared and optical data. These observations cover the transitions from the metastable 2^3S state at 3889 A and 10830 A, and from the 2^1 S state at 20587 A. This is the first AGN absorption line variability study to include measurements of the 20587 A line. The physical properties of the absorber recorded at the fifth observational epoch are relatively well constrained by the presence of absorption in both the optical and near-infrared components, with the 10830 A line likely saturated. The observations suggest variations in this absorbers strength are best explained by ionization changes in response to a variable incident continuum. Photoionization simulations constrain the total hydrogen number density of the epoch 5 absorber to 7.1<log(n_H/cm^-3)<8.8, the hydrogen column density to 21.2<log(N_H/cm^-2)<23.3 and the ionization parameter range to -1.9<logU<0.4. The simulations also suggest the absorber is located between 0.03 and 0.49 pc from the continuum emission region. This range in physical properties is consistent with an absorber of similar velocity seen in NGC 4151 from previous ultraviolet and optical studies, but with high column density X-ray absorbing components not present. The mass outflow rate due to the fifth epoch absorber is in the range 0.008 to 0.38 M_sun/yr, too low to contribute to galaxy feedback effects.
62 - N.J. Schurch 2002
We present a detailed analysis of the hard X-ray (>2.5 keV) EPIC spectra from the first observations of NGC 4151 made by XMM-Newton. We fit the spectra with a model consisting of a power-law continuum modified by line-of-sight absorption (arising in both partially photoionized and neutral gas) plus additional iron-K emission and absorption features. This model provides an excellent overall fit to the EPIC spectra. The iron K-alpha line is well modelled as a narrow Gaussian component. In contrast to several earlier studies based on data from ASCA, a relativistically broadened iron K-alpha emission feature is not required by the XMM-Newton data. The upper limit on the flux contained in any additional broad line is ~8% of that in the narrow line. The measured intrinsic line width (sigma =32+_7 eV) may be ascribed to (i) the doublet nature of the iron K-alpha line and (ii) emission from low ionization states of iron, ranging from neutral up to ~FeXVII. The additional iron absorption edge arises in cool material and implies factor ~2 overabundance of iron in this component.
The nucleus of the active galaxy NGC 5548 was the target of two intensive spectroscopic monitoring campaigns at X-ray, ultraviolet (UV), and optical frequencies in 2013/14. These campaigns detected the presence of a massive obscuration event. In 2016 /17, Landt et al. conducted a near-IR spectroscopic monitoring campaign on NGC 5548 and discovered He i 1.08 {mu}m absorption. Here we decompose this absorption into its components and study its time variability. We attribute the narrow He i absorption lines to the warm absorber and, as for the newly appeared low-ionization warm absorber lines in the UV, their presence is most likely due to a reduction in ionization parameter caused by the obscurer. The observed variability of the narrow He i absorption is consistent with what is expected for the warm absorber. Most importantly, we also detect fast, broad He i absorption, which we attribute to the obscurer. This He i broad absorption, which is indicative of a high-column density gas, is unsaturated and variable on time-scales of a few months. The observed variability of the obscurer is mainly due to changes in ionization, although density changes also play a role. We test the physical cycle model of Dehghanian et al. which proposes that helium recombination can account for how the obscurer influences the physics of the warm absorber gas. Our results support their model, but also indicate that the reality might be more complex.
We present the results from a detailed kinematic analysis of both ground-based, and Hubble Space Telescope/Faint Object Camera long-slit spectroscopy at sub-arcsec spatial resolution, of the narrow-line region of NGC 4151. In agreement with previous work, the extended emission gas (R > 4) is found to be in normal rotation in the galactic plane, a behaviour that we were able to trace even across the nuclear region, where the gas is strongly disturbed by the interaction with the radio jet, and connects smoothly with the large scale rotation defined by the neutral gas emission. The HST data, at 0.029 spatial resolution, allow us for the first time to truly isolate the kinematic behaviour of the individual clouds in the inner narrow-line region. We find that, underlying the perturbations introduced by the radio ejecta, the general velocity field can still be well represented by planar rotation down to a radius of ~ 0.5 (30 pc), distance at which the rotation curve has its turnover. The most striking result that emerges from our analysis is that the galaxy potential derived fitting the rotation curve changes from a dark halo at the ENLR distances to dominated by the central mass concentration in the NLR, with an almost Keplerian fall-off in the 1< R < 4 interval. The observed velocity of the gas at 0.5 implies a mass of M ~ 10E9 M(sol) within the inner 60 pc. The presence of a turnover in the rotation curve indicates that this central mass concentration is extended. The first measured velocity point (outside the region saturated by the nucleus) would imply an enclosed mass of ~ 5E7 M(sol) within R ~ 0.15 (10 pc) which represents an upper limit to any nuclear point mass.
The accretion of interstellar medium onto the central super massive black holes is widely accepted as the source of the gigantic energy released by the active galactic nuclei. But few pieces of observational evidence have been confirmed directly demo nstrating the existence of the inflows. The absorption line system in the spectra of quasar SDSS J112526.12+002901.3 presents an interesting example, in which the rarely detected hydrogen Balmer and metastable He I absorption lines are found redshifted to the quasars rest frame along with the low-ionization metal absorption lines Mg II, Fe II, etc. The repeated SDSS spectroscopic observations suggest a transverse velocity smaller than the radial velocity. The motion of the absorbing medium is thus dominated by infall. The He I* lines present a powerful probe to the strength of ionizing flux, while the Balmer lines imply a dense environment. With the help of photoionization simulations, we find the absorbing medium is exposed to the radiation with ionization parameter $Uapprox 10^{-1.8}$, and the density is $n(mathrm{H})approx 10^9 mathrm{cm}^{-3}$. Thus the absorbing medium is located $sim 4 mathrm{pc}$ away from the central engine. According to the similarity in the distance and physical conditions between the absorbing medium and the torus, we strongly propose the absorption line system as a candidate for the accretion inflow which originates from the inner surface of the torus.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا