4.7 Article

An X-ray spectral analysis of the central regions of NGC 4593

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 666, Issue 2, Pages 817-827

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/520763

Keywords

accretion; accretion disks; black hole physics; galaxies : nuclei

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We present a detailed analysis of XMM-Newton EPIC-pn data for the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 4593. We discuss the X-ray spectral properties of this source, as well as its variations with time. The 0.5-10 keV spectrum shows significant complexity beyond a simple power-law form, with clear evidence existing for a soft excess,'' as well as absorption by highly ionized plasma ( a warm absorber) within the central engine of this active galactic nucleus. We show that the soft excess is best described as originating from thermal Comptonization by plasma that is appreciably cooler than the primary X-ray-emitting plasma; we find that the form of the soft excess cannot be reproduced adequately by reflection from an ionized accretion disk. The only measurable deviation from the power-law continuum in the hard spectrum comes from the presence of cold and ionized fluorescent iron K alpha emission lines at 6.4 and 6.97 keV, respectively. While constraints on the ionized iron line are weak, the cold line is found to be narrow at CCD resolution with a flux that does not track the temporal changes in the underlying continuum, implying an origin in the outer radii of the accretion disk or the putative molecular torus of Seyfert unification schemes. The X-ray continuum itself varies on all accessible timescales. We detect a similar to 230 s time lag between soft and hard EPIC-pn bands that, if interpreted as scattering timescales within a Comptonizing disk corona, can be used to constrain the physical size of the primary X-ray source to a characteristic length scale of similar to 2r(g). Taken together, the small implied coronal size and the large implied iron-line emitting region indicate a departure from the current picture of a typical'' AGN geometry.

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