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  4. The 2-79 keV X-Ray Spectrum of the Circinus Galaxy with NuSTAR, XMM-Newton, and Chandra A Fully Compton-thick Active Galactic Nucleus
 
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The 2-79 keV X-Ray Spectrum of the Circinus Galaxy with NuSTAR, XMM-Newton, and Chandra A Fully Compton-thick Active Galactic Nucleus

Author(s)
Arvalo, P.
Bauer, F. E.
Puccetti, S.  
Walton, D. J.
Koss, M.
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Subjects

Astrophysics - High E...

Astrophysics - Astrop...

Date Issued
2014-08-01
Mission(s)
NuSTAR  
Abstract
The Circinus galaxy is one of the closest obscured active galactic nuclei (AGNs), making it an ideal target for detailed study. Combining archival Chandra and XMM-Newton data with new NuSTAR observations, we model the 2-79 keV spectrum to constrain the primary AGN continuum and to derive physical parameters for the obscuring material. Chandra's high angular resolution allows a separation of nuclear and off-nuclear galactic emission. In the off-nuclear diffuse emission, we find signatures of strong cold reflection, including high equivalent-width neutral Fe lines. This Compton-scattered off-nuclear emission amounts to 18% of the nuclear flux in the Fe line region, but becomes comparable to the nuclear emission above 30 keV. The new analysis no longer supports a prominent transmitted AGN component in the observed band. We find that the nuclear spectrum is consistent with Compton scattering by an optically thick torus, where the intrinsic spectrum is a power law of photon index Γ = 2.2-2.4, the torus has an equatorial column density of N_H = (6-10) x 10^24 cm^-2, and the intrinsic AGN 2-10 keV luminosity is (2.3-5.1) x 10^42 erg s^-1. These values place Circinus along the same relations as unobscured AGNs in accretion rate versus Γ and L_X versus L_IR phase space. NuSTAR's high sensitivity and low background allow us to study the short timescale variability of Circinus at X-ray energies above 10 keV for the first time. The lack of detected variability favors a Compton-thick absorber, in line with the spectral fitting results.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/3654
DOI
10.1088/0004-637X/791/2/81
URL
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2014ApJ...791...81A
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