2024-03-29T15:03:17Zhttp://digital.csic.es/dspace-oai/requestoai:digital.csic.es:10261/1093042021-08-11T11:10:24Zcom_10261_37com_10261_4com_10261_44col_10261_290col_10261_297
2015-01-13T11:21:42Z
urn:hdl:10261/109304
A high Eddington-ratio, true Seyfert 2 galaxy candidate: implications for broad-line region models
Miniutti, Giovanni
Saxton, Richard D.
Rodríguez-Pascual, P. M.
Read, A. M.
Esquej, Pilar
Colless, M.
Dobbie, P.
Spolaor, M.
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Galaxies: Seyfert
X-rays: galaxies
Galaxies: active
Accretion
Accretion discs
A bright, soft X-ray source was detected on 2010 July 14 during an XMM-Newton slew at a position consistent with the galaxy GSN 069 (z = 0.018). Previous ROSAT observations failed to detect the source and imply that GSN 069 is now ≥240 times brighter than it was in 1994 in the soft X-ray band. Optical spectra (from 2001 to 2003) are dominated by unresolved emission lines with no broad components, classifying GSN 069 as a Seyfert 2 galaxy. We report here results from a ~1 yr monitoring with Swift and XMM-Newton, as well as from new optical spectroscopy. GSN 069 is an unabsorbed, ultrasoft source in X-rays, with no flux detected above ~1 keV. The soft X-rays exhibit significant variability down to time-scales of hundreds of seconds. The UV-to-X-ray spectrum of GSN 069 is consistent with a pure accretion disc model which implies an Eddington ratio λ ≃ 0.5 and a black hole mass of ≃ 1.2 × 106Mȯ. A new optical spectrum, obtained ~3.5 months after the XMM-Newton slew detection, is consistent with earlier spectra and lacks any broad-line component. The lack of cold X-ray absorption and the short time-scale variability in the soft X-rays rule out a standard Seyfert 2 interpretation of the source. The present Eddington ratio of GSN 069 exceeds the critical value below which no emitting broad-line region (BLR) forms, according to popular models, so that GSN 069 can be classified as a bona-fide high Eddington-ratio true Seyfert 2 galaxy. We discuss our results within the framework of two possible scenarios for the BLR in AGN, namely the two-phase model (cold BLR clouds in pressure equilibrium with a hotter medium), and models in which the BLR is part of an outflow, or disc-wind. Finally, we point out that GSN 069 may be a member of a population of super-soft active galactic nuclei (AGN) whose spectral energy distribution is completely dominated by accretion disc emission, as it is the case in some black hole X-ray binary transients during their outburst evolution. The disc emission for a typical AGN with black hole mass of 107-108Mȯ does not enters the soft X-ray band, so that GSN 069-like objects with larger black hole mass (i.e. the bulk of the AGN population) are missed by current X-ray surveys, or misclassified as Compton-thick candidates. If the analogy between black hole X-ray binary transients and AGN holds, the lifetime of these super-soft states inAGNmay be longer than 104 years, implying that the actual population of super-soft AGN may not be negligible, possibly contaminating the estimated fraction of heavily obscured AGN from current X-ray surveys.
2015-01-13T11:21:42Z
2015-01-13T11:21:42Z
2013
2015-01-13T11:21:42Z
artículo
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 433(2): 1764-1777 (2013)
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/109304
10.1093/mnras/stt850
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100003329
eng
Publisher's version
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stt850
openAccess
Oxford University Press
Royal Astronomical Society