2004A&A...422...85P


Query : 2004A&A...422...85P

2004A&A...422...85P - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 422, 85-95 (2004/7-4)

XMM-Newton EPIC observations of 21 low-redshift PG quasars.

PORQUET D., REEVES J.N., O'BRIEN P. and BRINKMANN W.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present an X-ray spectral analysis of 21 low redshift quasars observed with XMM-Newton EPIC. All the sources are Palomar Green quasars with redshifts between 0.05 and 0.4 and have low Galactic absorption along the line-of-sight. A large majority of quasars in the sample (19/21) exhibit a significant soft excess below ∼1-1.5keV, whilst two objects (PG1114+445 and IZw1) show a deficit of soft X-ray flux due to the presence of a strong warm absorber. Indeed, contrary to previous studies with ASCA and ROSAT, we find that the presence of absorption features near 0.6-1.0keV is common in our sample. At least half of the objects appear to harbor a warm absorber, as found previously in Seyfert 1 galaxies. We find significant detections of FeKα emission lines in at least twelve objects, whilst there is evidence for some broadening of the line profile, compared to the EPIC-pn resolution, in five of these quasars. The determination of the nature of this broadening (e.g., Keplerian motion, a blend of lines, relativistic effects) is not possible with the present data and requires either higher S/N or higher resolution spectra. In seven objects the line is located between 6.7-7keV, corresponding to highly ionized iron, whereas in the other five objects the line energy is consistent with 6.4keV, i.e. corresponding to near neutral iron. The ionized lines tend to be found in the quasars with the steepest X-ray spectra. We also find a correlation between the continuum power law index Γ and the optical Hβ width, in both the soft and hard X-ray bands, whereby the steepest X-ray spectra are found in objects with narrow Hβ widths, which confirms previous ROSAT and ASCA results. The soft and hard band X-ray photon indices are also strongly correlated, i.e. the steepest soft X-ray spectra correspond the steepest hard X-ray spectra. We propose that a high accretion rate and a smaller black hole mass is likely to be the physical driver responsible for these trends, with the steep spectrum objects likely to have smaller black hole masses accreting near the Eddington rate.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: quasars: general - X-rays: general - galaxies: nuclei - radiation mechanisms : general

Simbad objects: 34

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Number of rows : 34
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2023
#notes
1 Mrk 1502 Sy1 00 53 34.9331107632 +12 41 35.929269132   14.41 14.03     ~ 1128 1
2 LEDA 87814 Sy1 00 58 37.3829486184 -36 06 04.948761240   14.9 14.90 15.0   ~ 86 0
3 LB 1727 Sy1 04 26 00.7188165240 -57 12 01.769902992 13.68 14.58 14.37 14.8   ~ 266 0
4 QSO B0558-5026 BLL 05 59 47.3916612936 -50 26 52.025952120   15.18 14.97     ~ 277 1
5 2MASS J08105865+7602424 Sy1 08 10 58.6641543864 +76 02 42.450451260   15.03 14.71     ~ 451 0
6 LEDA 2149945 Sy1 09 50 48.3803143440 +39 26 50.467298496   16.83 16.73     ~ 188 0
7 PG 0953+414 Sy1 09 56 52.3931554992 +41 15 22.211247636 14.710 15.611 15.546 15.294 14.720 ~ 441 0
8 QSO B1048+342 Sy1 10 51 43.8916339296 +33 59 26.683392840   17.11 16.79     ~ 187 0
9 NAME OKM2018 SWIFT J1117.1+4419 Sy1 11 17 06.3989076960 +44 13 33.324039480   16.32 16.12     ~ 237 0
10 LEDA 34570 Sy1 11 18 30.2894794680 +40 25 54.068810952   16.34 16.21     ~ 218 0
11 Ton 1388 Sy1 11 19 08.6786220240 +21 19 17.987085948   14.91 14.80     ~ 453 0
12 LEDA 38224 Sy1 12 04 42.1097215992 +27 54 11.869350264   15.64 15.60     ~ 386 0
13 Mrk 205 Sy1 12 21 44.0724099888 +75 18 38.241006228   15.64 15.24 14.7   ~ 467 0
14 LBQS 1244+0238 Sy1 12 46 35.2527826632 +02 22 08.782546368   16.57 16.37     ~ 286 0
15 LEDA 45656 Sy1 13 09 47.0031619008 +08 19 48.212362524   16.04 15.89     ~ 377 0
16 Ton 1565 Sy1 13 12 17.7526981968 +35 15 21.086467128   15.45 15.64 14.2   ~ 264 1
17 2MASS J13234951+6541480 Sy1 13 23 49.5182430360 +65 41 48.164463600   16.01 15.84     ~ 166 0
18 ESO 383-35 Sy1 13 35 53.7691256160 -34 17 44.160716796   13.89 13.61 8.9   ~ 1455 0
19 IRAS 13349+2438 Sy1 13 37 18.7199358192 +24 23 03.319883484     15.0     ~ 381 0
20 PB 4142 Sy1 13 54 35.6874184872 +18 05 17.504491992   16.84 16.68     ~ 217 0
21 Ton 182 Sy1 14 05 16.2178674936 +25 55 34.117540788   15.42 15.34     ~ 242 0
22 LEDA 50824 Sy1 14 13 48.3306274368 +44 00 14.003371296   14.99 14.99     ~ 374 0
23 NGC 5548 Sy1 14 17 59.5400291832 +25 08 12.603122268   14.35 13.73     ~ 2602 0
24 Mrk 1383 Sy1 14 29 06.5720038632 +01 17 06.155007252   15.21 14.87     ~ 444 0
25 2MASS J14294306+4747262 Sy1 14 29 43.0739786592 +47 47 26.217623904   17.29 16.97     ~ 174 0
26 Mrk 478 Sy1 14 42 07.4714418744 +35 26 22.938625500   14.91 14.58     ~ 521 0
27 ICRF J151443.0+365050 Sy1 15 14 43.0683049560 +36 50 50.355436776   17.11 17.01 15.83   ~ 397 1
28 Mrk 876 Sy1 16 13 57.1795021224 +65 43 09.952685328   16.03 15.49     ~ 561 0
29 QSO B1626+5529 Sy1 16 27 56.1123628752 +55 22 31.559061504   15.79 15.68     ~ 204 0
30 QSO B1725-142 QSO 17 28 19.7893499760 -14 15 55.854918288   14.69 14.03 13.7   ~ 286 0
31 Mrk 509 Sy1 20 44 09.7504483224 -10 43 24.727155528   13.35 13.12 10.7   ~ 1232 0
32 Mrk 896 Sy1 20 46 20.8414665240 -02 48 45.360840096   15.27 14.61     ~ 124 0
33 Mrk 304 Sy1 22 17 12.2637639888 +14 14 20.917852980   15.02 14.66     ~ 344 0
34 NAME MR 2251-178 Sy1 22 54 05.8858611984 -17 34 55.402233708   14.99 14.36 15.12   ~ 416 3

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2023.03.23-21:57:11

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