Litcius/Paper detail

Multi-timescale reverberation mapping of Mrk 335

Guglielmo Mastroserio, Adam Ingram, Michiel van der Klis

2020Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT Time lags due to X-ray reverberation have been detected in several Seyfert galaxies. The different traveltime between reflected and directly observed rays naturally causes this type of lag, which depends directly on the light-crossing time-scale of the system and hence scales with the mass of the central black hole. Featureless ‘hard lags’ not associated with reverberation, and often interpreted as propagating mass accretion rate fluctuations, dominate the longer time-scale variability. Here we fit our reltrans model simultaneously to the time-averaged energy spectrum and the lag-energy spectra of the Seyfert galaxy Mrk 335 over two time-scales (Fourier frequency ranges). We model the hard lags as fluctuations in the slope and strength of the illuminating spectrum, and self-consistently account for the effects that these fluctuations have on the reverberation lags. The resulting mass estimate is $1.1^{+2.0}_{-0.7} \times 10^6~\mathrm{ M}_\odot$, which is significantly lower than the mass measured with the optical reverberation mapping technique (14–26 million M⊙). When we add the correlated variability amplitudes to the time lags by fitting the full complex cross-spectra, the model is unable to describe the characteristic reverberation Fe K α line and cannot constrain the black hole mass. This may be due to the assumption that the direct radiation is emitted by a point-like source.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsReverberationAstrophysicsReverberation mappingGalaxyBlack hole (networking)AmplitudeSpectral lineAccretion (finance)Light curveFourier transformSpectral densityLagActive galactic nucleusAstronomyOpticsAcousticsStatisticsComputer networkQuantum mechanicsComputer scienceMathematicsLink-state routing protocolRouting protocolRouting (electronic design automation)Astrophysical Phenomena and ObservationsAdvanced X-ray Imaging Techniques