ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

XMM-Newton Detection of a Comptonized Accretion Disc in the Quasar PKS0558-504

92   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Paul T. O'Brien
 تاريخ النشر 2000
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف P.T. OBrien




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

We present XMM-Newton observations of the bright quasar PKS0558-504. The 0.2-10 keV spectrum is dominated by a large, variable soft X-ray excess. The fastest flux variations imply accretion onto a Kerr black hole. The XMM-Newton data suggest the presence of a `big blue bump in PKS0558-504 extending from the optical band to ~3 keV. The soft X-ray spectrum shows no evidence for significant absorption or emission-line features. The most likely explanation for the hot big blue bump is Comptonization by the multi-temperature corona of a thermal accretion disc running at a high accretion rate.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We present results from the spectral analysis of a long XMM-Newton observation of the radio-loud NLS1 galaxy PKS0558-504. The source is highly variable, on all sampled time scales. We did not observe any absorption features in either the soft or hard X-ray band. We found weak evidence for the presence of an iron line at ~6.8 keV, which is indicative of emission from highly ionized iron. The 2-10 keV band spectrum is well fitted by a simple power law model, whose slope steepens with increasing flux, similar to what is observed in other Seyferts as well. The soft excess is variable both in flux and shape, and it can be well described by a low-temperature Comptonisation model, whose slope flattens with increasing flux. The soft excess flux variations are moderately correlated with the hard band variations, and we found weak evidence that they are leading them by ~20 ksec. Our results rule out a jet origin for the bulk of the X-ray emission in this object. The observed hard band spectral variations suggest intrinsic continuum slope variations, caused by changes in the heating/cooling ratio of the hot corona. The low-temperature Comptonising medium, responsible for the soft excess emission, could be a hot layer in the inner disc of the source, which appears due to the fact that the source is accreting at a super-Eddington rate. The soft excess flux and spectral variations could be caused by random variations of the accretion rate.
323 - M. Gliozzi 2000
We present the temporal analysis of X-ray observations of the radio-loud Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 galaxy (NLS1) PKS 0558-504 obtained during the XMM-Newton Calibration and Performance Verification (Cal/PV) phase. The long term light curve is characteriz ed by persistent variability with a clear tendency for the X-ray continuum to harden when the count rate increases. Another strong correlation on long time scales has been found between the variability in the hard band and the total flux. On shorter time scales the most relevant result is the presence of smooth modulations, with characteristic time of ~ 2 hours observed in each individual observation. The short term spectral variability turns out to be rather complex but can be described by a well defined pattern in the hardness ratio-count rate plane.
303 - G. Salvesen 2008
We report on an XMM-Newton observation of the z=1.055 quasar and Giga-hertz Peaked Spectrum (GPS) source 3C 287. Our 62.3 ksec observation provides an exceptional X-ray view of a prominent member of this important subclass of active galactic nuclei ( AGN). The X-ray spectra of 3C 287 are consistent with a simple absorbed power-law with a spectral index of Gamma = 1.72 +/- 0.02. Our fits imply a bolometric luminosity of L = 5.8 +/- 0.2 E+45 erg/s over the 0.3-10.0 keV band; this gives a mass lower limit of M > 4.6 E+7 Msun, assuming X-rays contribute 10% of the bolometric luminosity and radiation at the Eddington limit. Iron emission lines are common in the X-ray spectra of many AGN, but the observed spectra appear to rule out strong emission lines in 3C 287. The simple power-law spectrum and absence of strong emission lines may support a picture where our line of sight intersects a relativistic jet. Milliarcsecond radio imaging of 3C 287 appears to support this interpretation. We discuss our results in the context of different AGN sub-classes and the possibility that GPS sources harbor newly-formed black hole jets.
Microlensing observations indicate that quasar accretion discs have half-light radii larger than expected from standard theoretical predictions based on quasar fluxes or black hole masses. Blackburne and colleagues have also found a very weak wavelen gth dependence of these half-light radii. We consider disc temperature profile models that might match these observations. Nixon and colleagues have suggested that misaligned accretion discs around spinning black holes will be disrupted at radii small enough for the Lense-Thirring torque to overcome the discs viscous torque. Gas in precessing annuli torn off a disc will spread radially and intersect with the remaining disc, heating the disc at potentially large radii. However, if the intersection occurs at an angle of more than a degree or so, highly supersonic collisions will shock-heat the gas to a Compton temperature of T~10^7 K, and the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of discs with such shock-heated regions are poor fits to observations of quasar SEDs. Torn discs where heating occurs in intermittent weak shocks that occur whenever the intersection angle reaches a tenth of a degree pose less of a conflict with observations, but do not have significantly larger half-light radii than standard discs. We also study two phenomenological disc temperature profile models. We find that discs with a temperature spike at relatively large radii and lowered temperatures at radii inside the spike yield improved and acceptable fits to microlensing sizes in most cases. Such temperature profiles could in principle occur in sub-Keplerian discs partially supported by magnetic pressure. However, such discs overpredict the fluxes from quasars studied with microlensing except in the limit of negligible continuum emission from radii inside the temperature spike.
We want to explore the geometrical structure and mutual interactions of the innermost components of the broad line radio galaxy (BLRG) 3C 215, with particular interest in the accretion and ejection mechanisms involving the central supermassive black hole (SMBH). We compare these observational features with the ones of the RQ Seyfert 1 galaxies. Investigating their differences it is possible to understand more about the jet launching mechanisms, and why this phenomenon is efficient only in a small fraction of all the AGNs. Using high quality data from a $sim60$ ks observation with XMM-Newton, we carried out a detailed X-ray spectral analysis of 3C 215 in the broad energy range $0.5-10$ keV. We modeled the spectrum with an absorbed double power-law model for the primary continuum, reprocessed by reflection from ionized and cold neutral material and modified by relativistic blurring. We also compared our results with the ones obtained with previous multi-wavelength observations. We obtain a primary continuum photon index from the corona $Gamma_1=1.97pm0.06$ and evidence of a jet contribution, modeled as a power law with photon index $Gamma_2simeq1.29$. The reflector, possibly the accretion disk and portions of the broad-line region (BLR), is ionized ($logxi=2.31_{-0.27}^{+0.37} mathrm{erg s^{-1} cm}$) and relatively distant from the SMBH ($R_{in}>38 R_g$), where $R_g=GM_{BH}/c^2$ is the gravitational radius. The obscuring torus seems patchy, dust-poor and inefficient, while the jet emission shows a twisted and knotted geometry. We propose three scenarios in order to describe these characteristics: 1.) ADAF state in the inner disk; 2.) Slim accretion disk; 3.) sub-pc SMBH binary system (SMBHB).
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