1,886 research outputs found
A fundamental plane of black hole activity
We examine the disc--jet connection in stellar mass and supermassive black
holes by investigating the properties of their compact emission in the X-ray
and radio bands. We compile a sample of ~100 active galactic nuclei with
measured mass, 5 GHz core emission, and 2-10 keV luminosity, together with 8
galactic black holes with a total of ~50 simultaneous observations in the radio
and X-ray bands. Using this sample, we study the correlations between the radio
(L_{R}) and the X-ray (L_{X}) luminosity and the black hole mass (M). We find
that the radio luminosity is correlated with {\em both} M and L_{X}, at a
highly significant level. In particular, we show that the sources define a
``fundamental plane'' in the three-dimensional (log L_{R},log L_{X},log M)
space, given by log L_{R}=(0.60^{+0.11}_{-0.11}) log L_{X}
+(0.78^{+0.11}_{-0.09}) log M + 7.33^{+4.05}_{-4.07}, with a substantial
scatter of \sigma_{R}=0.88. We compare our results to the theoretical relations
between radio flux, black hole mass, and accretion rate derived by Heinz and
Sunyaev (2003). Such relations depend only on the assumed accretion model and
on the observed radio spectral index. Therefore, we are able to show that the
X-ray emission from black holes accreting at less than a few per cent of the
Eddington rate is unlikely to be produced by radiatively efficient accretion,
and is marginally consistent with optically thin synchrotron emission from the
jet. On the other hand, models for radiatively inefficient accretion flows seem
to agree well with the data.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures (2 in colour). Revised version accepted for
publication by MNRAS. Improved and extended discussio
An adaptive-binning method for generating constant-uncertainty/constant-significance light curves with Fermi-LAT data
We present a method enabling the creation of
constant-uncertainty/constant-significance light curves with the data of the
Fermi-Large Area Telescope (LAT). The adaptive-binning method enables more
information to be encapsulated within the light curve than with the
fixed-binning method. Although primarily developed for blazar studies, it can
be applied to any sources. This method allows the starting and ending times of
each interval to be calculated in a simple and quick way during a first step.
The reported mean flux and spectral index (assuming the spectrum is a power-law
distribution) in the interval are calculated via the standard LAT analysis
during a second step. The absence of major caveats associated with this method
has been established by means of Monte-Carlo simulations. We present the
performance of this method in determining duty cycles as well as power-density
spectra relative to the traditional fixed-binning method.Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables. Submitted to A&
The X-ray reflector in NGC 4945: a time and space resolved portrait
We present a time, spectral and imaging analysis of the X-ray reflector in
NGC 4945, which reveals its geometrical and physical structure with
unprecedented detail. NGC 4945 hosts one of the brightest AGN in the sky above
10 keV, but it is only visible through its reflected/scattered emission below
10 keV, due to absorption by a column density of ~4\times10^24 cm-2. A new
Suzaku campaign of 5 observations spanning ~6 months, together with past
XMM-Newton and Chandra observations, show a remarkable constancy (within <10%)
of the reflected component. Instead, Swift-BAT reveals strong intrinsic
variability on time scales longer than one year. Modeling the circumnuclear gas
as a thin cylinder with the axis on the plane of the sky, we show that the
reflector is at a distance >30-50 pc, well within the imaging capabilities of
Chandra at the distance of NGC 4945 (1"~18 pc). Accordingly, the Chandra
imaging reveals a resolved, flattened, ~150 pc-long clumpy structure, whose
spectrum is fully due to cold reflection of the primary AGN emission. The
clumpiness may explain the small covering factor derived from the spectral and
variability properties.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Reprocessing of X-rays in AGN. I. Plane parallel geometry -- test of pressure equilibrium
We present a model of the vertical stratification and the spectra of an
irradiated medium under the assumption of constant pressure. Such a solution
has properties intermediate between constant density models and hydrostatic
equilibrium models, and it may represent a flattened configuration of gas
clumps accreting onto the central black hole. Such a medium develops a hot
skin, thicker than hydrostatic models, but thinner than constant density
models, under comparable irradiation. The range of theoretical values of the
alpha_ox index is comparable to those from hydrostatic models and both are
close to the observed values for Seyfert galaxies but lower than in quasars.
The amount of X-ray Compton reflection is consistent with the observed range.
The characteristic property of the model is a frequently multicomponent iron K
alpha line.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Variability of Active Galactic Nuclei from the Optical to X-ray Regions
Some progress in understanding AGN variability is reviewed. Reprocessing of
X-ray radiation to produce significant amounts of longer-wavelength continua
seems to be ruled out. In some objects where there has been correlated X-ray
and optical variability, the amplitude of the optical variability has exceeded
the amplitude of X-ray variability. We suggest that accelerated particles
striking material could be linking X-ray and optical variability (as in
activity in the solar chromosphere). Beaming effects could be significant in
all types of AGN. The diversity in optical/X-ray relationships at different
times in the same object, and between different objects, might be explained by
changes in geometry and directions of motion relative to our line of sight.
Linear shot-noise models of the variability are ruled out; instead there must
be large-scale organization of variability. Variability occurs on
light-crossing timescales rather than viscous timescales and this probably
rules out the standard Shakura-Sunyaev accretion disk. Radio-loud and
radio-quiet AGNs have similar continuum shapes and similar variability
properties. This suggests similar continuum origins and variability mechanisms.
Despite their extreme X-ray variability, narrow-line Seyfert 1s (NLS1s) do not
show extreme optical variability.Comment: Invited talk given at Euro Asian Astronomical Society meeting in
Moscow, June 2002. 20 pages, 4 figures. References update
High resolution study of associated C IV absorption systems in NGC 5548
We present the results of a careful analysis of associated absorption systems
toward NGC 5548. Most of the well resolved narrow components in the associated
system, defined by the Lyman alpha, C IV and N V profiles, show velocity
separation similar (to within 10~\kms) to the C IV doublet splitting. We
estimate the chance probability of occurrence of such pairs with velocity
separation equal to C IV doublet splitting to be . Thus it is
more likely that most of the narrow components are line-locked with C IV
doublet splitting. This will mean that the radiative acceleration plays an
important role in the kinematics of the absorbing clouds. We build grids of
photoionization models and estimate the radiative acceleration due to all
possible bound-bound transitions. We show that the clouds producing absorption
have densities less than , and are in the outer regions of the
broad emission line region (BLR). We note that the clouds which are line-locked
cannot produce appreciable optical depths of O VII and O VIII, and hence cannot
be responsible for the observed ionized edges, in the soft X-ray. We discuss
the implications of the presence of optically thin clouds in the outer regions
of the BLR to the models of broad emission lines.Comment: 21 pages, latex (aasms4 style), incluedes 4 ps figures. To appear in
Astrophysical Journa
An alternative model of the magnetic cataclysmic variable V1432 Aquilae (=RX J1940.1-1025)
V1432 Aql is currently considered to be an asynchronous AM Her type system,
with an orbital period of 12116.3 s and a spin period of 12150 s. I present an
alternative model in which V1432 Aql is an intermediate polar with disk
overflow or diskless accretion geometry, with a spin period near 4040 s. I
argue that published data are insufficient to distinguish between the two
models; instead, I provide a series of predictions of the two models that can
be tested against future observations.Comment: 10 pages LaTeX including 3 Postscript Figures, to be published in Ap
Ionized Absorbers in AGN: the Role of Collisional Ionization and Time-Evolving Photoionization
In this paper we explore collisional ionization and time-evolving
photoionization in the, X-ray discovered, ionized absorbers in Seyfert
galaxies. These absorbers show temporal changes inconsistent with simple
equilibrium models. We develop a simple code to follow the temporal evolution
of non-equilibrium photoionized gas. As a result several effects appear that
are easily observable; and which, in fact, may explain otherwise paradoxical
behavior.
Specifically we find that: 1) In many important astrophysical conditions pure
collisional and photoionization equilibria can be distinguished with moderate
spectral resolution observations, due to a strong absorption structure between
1 and 3 keV. 2) In time-evolving non-equilibrium photoionization models the
response of the ionization state of the gas to sudden changes of the ionizing
continuum is smoothed and delayed at low gas densities, even when the
luminosity increases. 3) If the changes of the ionizing luminosity are not
instantaneous, and the electron density is low enough (the limit depends on the
average ionization state of the gas), the ionization state of the gas can
continue to increase while the source luminosity decreases, so a maximum in the
ionization state of a given element may occur during a minimum of the ionizing
intensity (the opposite of the prediction of equilibrium models). 4) Different
ions of different elements reach their equilibrium configuration on different
time-scales.
These properties are similar to those seen in several ionized absorbers in
AGN, properties which had hitherto been puzzling. We applied these models to a
high S/N ROSAT PSPC observation of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 4051.Comment: 36 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication on Apj, in pres
Extending the Shakura-Sunyaev approach to a strongly magnetized accretion disc model
We develop a model of thin turbulent accretion discs supported by magnetic
pressure of turbulent magnetic fields. This applies when the turbulent kinetic
and magnetic energy densities are greater than the thermal energy density in
the disc. Whether such discs survive in nature or not remains to be determined,
but here we simply demonstrate that self-consistent solutions exist when the
alpha-prescription for the viscous stress, similar to that of the original
Shakura-Sunyaev model, is used. We show that \alpha \sim 1 for the strongly
magnetized case and we calculate the radial structure and emission spectra from
the disc in the regime when it is optically thick. Strongly magnetized
optically thick discs can apply to the full range of disc radii for objects <
10^{-2} of the Eddington luminosity or for the outer parts of discs in higher
luminosity sources. In the limit that the magnetic pressure is equal to the
thermal or radiation pressure, our strongly magnetized disc model transforms
into the Shakura-Sunyaev model with \alpha=1. Our model produces spectra quite
similar to those of standard Shakura-Sunyaev models. In our comparative study,
we also discovered a small discrepancy in the spectral calculations of Shakura
and Sunyaev (1973).Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, Astron. Astroph. in press; shortened version
accepted by A&A, all calculations and conclusions are unchange
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