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Disentangling the complex broad-band X-ray spectrum of IRAS 13197−1627 with NuSTAR, XMM–Newton and Suzaku

Authors :
D. Stern
Fiona A. Harrison
A. C. Fabian
Giorgio Matt
Murray Brightman
Anne M. Lohfink
Guido Risaliti
Michael Parker
Dom Walton
Felix Fürst
Giovanni Miniutti
Walton, D. J.
Brightman, M.
Risaliti, G.
Fabian, A. C.
Fürst, F.
Harrison, F. A.
Lohfink, A.
Matt, G.
Miniutti, G.
Parker, M. L.
Stern, D.
Source :
NASA Astrophysics Data System
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2017.

Abstract

We present results from a coordinated $XMM$-$Newton$+$NuSTAR$ observation of the type 1.8 Seyfert galaxy IRAS 13197-1627. This is a highly complex source, with strong contributions from relativistic reflection from the inner accretion disk, neutral absorption and further reprocessing by more distant material, and ionised absorption from an outflow. We undertake a detailed spectral analysis combining the broadband coverage provided by $XMM$-$Newton$+$NuSTAR$ with a multi-epoch approach incorporating archival observations performed by $XMM$-$Newton$ and $Suzaku$. Our focus is on characterising the reflection from the inner accretion disk, which previous works have suggested may dominate the AGN emission, and constraining the black hole spin. Using lamppost disk reflection models, we find that the results for the inner disk are largely insensitive to assumptions regarding the geometry of the distant reprocessor and the precise form of the illuminating X-ray continuum. However, these results do depend on the treatment of the iron abundance of the distant absorber/reprocessor. The multi-epoch data favour a scenario in which the AGN is chemically homogeneous, and we find that a rapidly rotating black hole is preferred, with $a^* \geq 0.7$, but a slowly-rotating black hole is not strongly excluded. In addition to the results for the inner disk, we also find that both the neutral and ionised absorbers vary from epoch to epoch, implying that both have some degree of inhomogeneity in their structure.<br />15 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

ISSN :
13652966 and 00358711
Volume :
473
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....60b52ab9439773ace9011a8ca2497147