X-ray reverberation in 1H 0707-495 revisited
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 408:3 (2010) 1928-1935
Abstract:
The narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy 1H 0707-495 has previously been identified as showing time lags between flux variations in the soft-energy (0.3-1 keV) and medium-energy (1-4 keV) X-ray bands that oscillate between positive and negative values as a function of the frequency of the mode of variation. Here we measure and analyse the lags also between a harder X-ray band (4-7.5 keV) and the soft and medium bands, using existing XMM-Newton data, and demonstrate that the entire spectrum of lags, considering both the full energy range, 0.3-7.5 keV, and the full frequency range, 10-5≲ν≲ 10-2 Hz, are inconsistent with previous claims of arising as reverberation associated with the inner accretion disc. Instead we demonstrate that a simple reverberation model, in which scattering or reflection is present in all X-ray bands, explains the full set of lags without requiring any ad hoc explanation for the time lag sign changes. The range of time delays required to explain the observed lags extends up to about 1800 s in the hard band. The results are consistent with reverberation caused by scattering of X-rays passing through an absorbing medium whose opacity decreases with increasing energy and that partially covers the source. A high covering factor of absorbing and scattering circumnuclear material is inferred. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 RAS.COSMIC-RAY SPALLATION IN RADIO-QUIET ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI: A CASE STUDY OF NGC 4051
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL 709:2 (2010) 1230-1237
Evidence for a truncated accretion disc in the low-luminosity Seyfert galaxy, NGC 7213?
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 408:1 (2010) 551-564
The absorption-dominated model for the X-ray spectra of type I active galaxies: MCG-6-30-15
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters 399:1 (2009)
Abstract:
MCG-6-30-15 is the archetypal example of a type I active galaxy showing broad 'red-wing' emission in its X-ray spectrum at energies below the 6.4 keV Fe Kα emission line and a continuum excess above 20 keV. Miller et al. showed that these spectral features could be caused by clumpy absorbing material, but Reynolds et al. have argued that the observed Fe Kα line luminosity is inconsistent with this explanation unless the global covering factor of the absorber(s) is very low. However, the Reynolds et al. calculation effectively considers the only source of opacity to be the Fe K bound-free transition and neglects the opacity at the line energy: correction to realistic opacity decreases the predicted line flux by a large factor. We also discuss the interpretation of the covering factor and the possible effect of occultation by the accretion disc. Finally, we consider a model for MCG-6-30-15 dominated by clumpy absorption, which is consistent with a global covering factor of 0.45, although models that include the effects of Compton scattering are required to reach a full understanding. Variations in covering fraction may dominate the observed X-ray spectral variability. © 2009 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2009 RAS.X-ray absorption and reflection in active galactic nuclei
Astronomy and Astrophysics Review 17:1 (2009) 47-104