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AGN STORM 2: II. Ultraviolet Observations of Mrk817 with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope

Authors :
Y. Homayouni
Gisella De Rosa
Rachel Plesha
Gerard A. Kriss
Aaron J. Barth
Edward M. Cackett
Keith Horne
Erin A. Kara
Hermine Landt
Nahum Arav
Benjamin D. Boizelle
Misty C. Bentz
Thomas G. Brink
Michael S. Brotherton
Doron Chelouche
Elena Dalla Bontà
Maryam Dehghanian
Pu Du
Gary J. Ferland
Laura Ferrarese
Carina Fian
Alexei V. Filippenko
Travis Fischer
Ryan J. Foley
Jonathan Gelbord
Michael R. Goad
Diego H. González Buitrago
Varoujan Gorjian
Catherine J. Grier
Patrick B. Hall
Juan V. Hernández Santisteban
Chen Hu
Dragana Ilić
Michael D. Joner
Jelle Kaastra
Shai Kaspi
Christopher S. Kochanek
Kirk T. Korista
Andjelka B. Kovačević
Daniel Kynoch
Yan-Rong Li
Ian M. McHardy
Jacob N. McLane
Missagh Mehdipour
Jake A. Miller
Jake Mitchell
John Montano
Hagai Netzer
Christos Panagiotou
Ethan Partington
Richard W. Pogge
Luka Č. Popović
Daniel Proga
Daniele Rogantini
Thaisa Storchi-Bergmann
David Sanmartim
Matthew R. Siebert
Tommaso Treu
Marianne Vestergaard
Jian-Min Wang
Martin J. Ward
Tim Waters
Peter R. Williams
Fatima Zaidouni
Ying Zu
University of St Andrews. School of Physics and Astronomy
University of St Andrews. St Andrews Centre for Exoplanet Science
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal, 2023, Vol.948(2), pp.85 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
arXiv, 2023.

Abstract

We present reverberation mapping measurements for the prominent ultraviolet broad emission lines of the active galactic nucleus Mrk817 using 165 spectra obtained with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope. Our ultraviolet observations are accompanied by X-ray, optical, and near-infrared observations as part of the AGN Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping Program 2 (AGN STORM 2). Using the cross-correlation lag analysis method, we find significant correlated variations in the continuum and emission-line light curves. We measure rest-frame delayed responses between the far-ultraviolet continuum at 1180 A and Ly$\alpha$ $\lambda1215$ A ($10.4_{-1.4}^{+1.6}$ days), N V $\lambda1240$ A ($15.5_{-4.8}^{+1.0}$days), SiIV + OIV] $\lambda1397$ A ($8.2_{-1.4}^{+1.4}$ days), CIV $\lambda1549$ A ($11.8_{-2.8}^{+3.0}$ days), and HeII $\lambda1640$ A ($9.0_{-1.9}^{+4.5}$ days) using segments of the emission-line profile that are unaffected by absorption and blending, which results in sampling different velocity ranges for each line. However, we find that the emission-line responses to continuum variations are more complex than a simple smoothed, shifted, and scaled version of the continuum light curve. We also measure velocity-resolved lags for the Ly$\alpha$, and CIV emission lines. The lag profile in the blue wing of Ly$\alpha$ is consistent with virial motion, with longer lags dominating at lower velocities, and shorter lags at higher velocities. The CIV lag profile shows the signature of a thick rotating disk, with the shortest lags in the wings, local peaks at $\pm$ 1500 $\rm km\,s^{-1}$, and a local minimum at line center. The other emission lines are dominated by broad absorption lines and blending with adjacent emission lines. These require detailed models, and will be presented in future work.<br />Comment: Submitted to ApJ. 25 pages, 8 figures, and 6 tables

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal, 2023, Vol.948(2), pp.85 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f677bdeb2cfaa6a2a8c56d4465a3b236
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2302.11587