2014A&A...567A..44B


Query : 2014A&A...567A..44B

2014A&A...567A..44B - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 567A, 44-44 (2014/7-1)

Multiwavelength campaign on Mrk 509. XIII. Testing ionized-reflection models on Mrk 509.

BOISSAY R., PALTANI S., PONTI G., BIANCHI S., CAPPI M., KAASTRA J.S., PETRUCCI P.-O., ARAV N., BRANDUARDI-RAYMONT G., COSTANTINI E., EBRERO J., KRISS G.A., MEHDIPOUR M., PINTO C. and STEENBRUGGE K.C.

Abstract (from CDS):

Active galactic nuclei (AGN) are the most luminous persistent objects in the universe. The X-ray domain is particularly important because the X-ray flux represents a significant fraction of the bolometric emission from such objects and probes the innermost regions of accretion disks, where most of this power is generated. An excess of X-ray emission below ∼2keV, called soft-excess, is very common in Type 1 AGN spectra. The origin of this feature remains debated. Originally modeled with a blackbody, there are now several possibilities to model the soft-excess, including warm Comptonization and blurred ionized reflection. In this paper, we test ionized-reflection models on Mrk 509, a bright Seyfert 1 galaxy for which we have a unique data set, in order to determine whether it can be responsible for the strong soft-excess. We use ten simultaneous XMM-Newton and INTEGRAL observations performed every four days. We present here the results of the spectral analysis, the evolution of the parameters, and the variability properties of the X-ray emission. The application of blurred ionized-reflection models leads to a very strong reflection and an extreme geometry, but fails to reproduce the broad-band spectrum of Mrk 509. Two different scenarios for blurred ionized reflection are discussed: stable geometry and lamp-post configuration. In both cases we find that the model parameters do not follow the expected relations, indicating that the model is fine-tuned to fit the data without physical justification. A large, slow variation in the soft-excess without a counterpart in the hard X-rays could be explained by a change in ionization of the reflector. However, such a change does not naturally follow from the assumed geometrical configuration. Warm Comptonization remains the most probable origin of the soft-excess in this object. Nevertheless, it is possible that both ionized reflection and warm Comptonization mechanisms can explain the soft-excess in all objects, one dominating the other one, depending on the physical conditions of the disk and the corona.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: active - galaxies: nuclei - galaxies: Seyfert - galaxies: individual: Mrk 509 - X-rays: galaxies

Simbad objects: 24

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Number of rows : 24
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 Mrk 335 Sy1 00 06 19.5372339024 +20 12 10.617404076   14.19 13.85     ~ 1252 0
2 ESO 113-10 Sy1 01 05 16.8746925168 -58 26 15.260456148   14.63 14.6 13.35   ~ 62 0
3 RX J0136.9-3510 Sy1 01 36 54.4576651920 -35 09 52.327612296   18.80   17.80   ~ 47 0
4 LB 1727 Sy1 04 26 00.7188165240 -57 12 01.769902992 13.68 14.58 14.37 14.8   ~ 276 0
5 Mrk 1095 Sy1 05 16 11.4092471904 -00 08 59.157166920   14.30 13.92     ~ 890 1
6 2MASS J05594739-5026519 Sy1 05 59 47.3916612936 -50 26 52.025952120   15.18 14.97     ~ 289 1
7 LEDA 88588 Sy1 07 08 41.4886614696 -49 33 06.308921700   16.02 15.7 12.7   ~ 517 0
8 ESO 434-40 Sy2 09 47 40.1332188528 -30 56 55.960779696   14.10 13.69 12.44   ~ 552 0
9 Z 212-25 Sy1 10 34 38.5982990352 +39 38 28.187042604   17.37 16.90     ~ 362 1
10 NGC 4051 Sy1 12 03 09.6101337312 +44 31 52.682601288   11.08 12.92 9.94   ~ 2164 1
11 LEDA 38224 Sy1 12 04 42.1097215992 +27 54 11.869350264   15.64 15.60     ~ 405 0
12 NGC 4151 Sy1 12 10 32.5759813872 +39 24 21.063527532   12.18 11.48     ~ 3687 2
13 PB 3894 Sy1 12 14 17.6738687784 +14 03 13.182723144   14.46 14.19     ~ 821 0
14 NGC 4253 Sy1 12 18 26.5163572920 +29 48 46.531535472   14.34 13.57     ~ 1039 1
15 ESO 383-35 Sy1 13 35 53.7691256160 -34 17 44.160716796   13.89 13.61 8.9   ~ 1482 0
16 2E 3140 Sy1 13 48 34.9531368648 +26 31 09.840776880   17.86 17.43     ~ 48 0
17 Mrk 279 Sy1 13 53 03.4348964112 +69 18 29.410910460   15.15 14.46     ~ 761 0
18 NGC 5548 Sy1 14 17 59.5400291832 +25 08 12.603122268   14.35 13.73     ~ 2708 0
19 Mrk 478 Sy1 14 42 07.4714418744 +35 26 22.938625500   14.91 14.58     ~ 533 0
20 Mrk 841 Sy1 15 04 01.1935384104 +10 26 15.780409692   14.50 14.27     ~ 649 0
21 V* V818 Sco LXB 16 19 55.0692669024 -15 38 25.017666540 11.60 12.40 11.1     Oev 1643 0
22 Mrk 509 Sy1 20 44 09.7504483224 -10 43 24.727155528   13.35 13.12 10.7   ~ 1275 0
23 NGC 7314 Sy2 22 35 46.1985355872 -26 03 01.564993476   11.62 13.11 10.61 11.4 ~ 564 0
24 UGC 12163 Sy1 22 42 39.3363009144 +29 43 31.302092640   14.86 14.16     ~ 697 1

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