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UV–Optical Disk Reverberation Lags despite a Faint X-Ray Corona in the Active Galactic Nucleus Mrk 335

Authors :
Erin Kara
Aaron J. Barth
Edward M. Cackett
Jonathan Gelbord
John Montano
Yan-Rong Li
Lisabeth Santana
Keith Horne
William N. Alston
Douglas Buisson
Doron Chelouche
Pu Du
Andrew C. Fabian
Carina Fian
Luigi Gallo
Michael R. Goad
Dirk Grupe
Diego H. González Buitrago
Juan V. Hernández Santisteban
Shai Kaspi
Chen Hu
S. Komossa
Gerard A. Kriss
Collin Lewin
Tiffany Lewis
Michael Loewenstein
Anne Lohfink
Megan Masterson
Ian M. McHardy
Missagh Mehdipour
Jake Miller
Christos Panagiotou
Michael L. Parker
Ciro Pinto
Ron Remillard
Christopher Reynolds
Daniele Rogantini
Jian-Min Wang
Jingyi Wang
Dan Wilkins
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal, Vol 947, Iss 2, p 62 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2023.

Abstract

We present the first results from a 100-day Swift, NICER, and ground-based X-ray–UV–optical reverberation mapping campaign of the Narrow-line Seyfert 1 Mrk 335, when it was in an unprecedented low X-ray flux state. Despite dramatic suppression of the X-ray variability, we still observe UV–optical lags as expected from disk reverberation. Moreover, the UV–optical lags are consistent with archival observations when the X-ray luminosity was >10 times higher. Interestingly, both low- and high-flux states reveal UV–optical lags that are 6–11 times longer than expected from a thin disk. These long lags are often interpreted as due to contamination from the broad line region; however the u- band excess lag (containing the Balmer jump from the diffuse continuum) is less prevalent than in other active galactic nuclei. The Swift campaign showed a low X-ray-to-optical correlation (similar to previous campaigns), but NICER and ground-based monitoring continued for another 2 weeks, during which the optical rose to the highest level of the campaign, followed ∼10 days later by a sharp rise in X-rays. While the low X-ray countrate and relatively large systematic uncertainties in the NICER background make this measurement challenging, if the optical does lead X-rays in this flare, this indicates a departure from the zeroth-order reprocessing picture. If the optical flare is due to an increase in mass accretion rate, this occurs on much shorter than the viscous timescale. Alternatively, the optical could be responding to an intrinsic rise in X-rays that is initially hidden from our line of sight.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15384357
Volume :
947
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.252d153a7b0146e6a5630ae8ae96deef
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acbcd3