SIMBAD references

1998ApJ...505..587W - Astrophys. J., 505, 587-593 (1998/October-1)

The ionization fraction in the obscuring ``Torus'' of an active galactic nucleus.

WILSON A.S., ROY A.L., ULVESTAD J.S., COLBERT E.J.M., WEAVER K.A., BRAATZ J.A., HENKEL C., MATSUOKA M., XUE S., IYOMOTO N. and OKADA K.

Abstract (from CDS):

The LINER galaxy NGC 2639 contains a water vapor megamaser, suggesting the presence of a nuclear accretion disk or torus viewed close to edge-on. This galaxy is thus a good candidate for revealing absorption by the torus of any compact nuclear continuum emission. In this paper, we report VLBA radio maps at three frequencies and an ASCA X-ray spectrum obtained to search for free-free and photoelectric absorptions, respectively. The radio observations reveal a compact (<0.2 pc) nuclear source with a spectrum that turns over sharply near 5 GHz. This turnover may reflect either synchrotron self-absorption or free-free absorption. The galaxy is detected by ASCA with an observed luminosity of 1.4x1041 ergs.s–1 in the 0.6-10 keV band. The X-ray spectrum shows emission in excess of a power-law model at energies greater than 4 keV; we interpret this excess as compact, nuclear, hard X-ray emission with the lower energies photoelectrically absorbed by an equivalent hydrogen column of ≃ 5x1023 cm–2. If we assume that the turnover in the radio spectrum is caused by free-free absorption and that both the free-free and photoelectric absorptions are produced by the same gaseous component, the ratio ∈ n2e dl/∈ nH dl may be determined. If the masing molecular gas is responsible for both absorptions, the required ionization fraction is ≳1.3x10–5, which is comparable to the theoretical upper limit derived by Neufeld, Maloney, and Conger for X-ray heated molecular gas. The two values may be reconciled if the molecular gas is very dense: nH2≳109 cm–3. The measured ionization fraction is also consistent with the idea that both absorptions occur in a hot (∼6000 K), weakly ionized (ionization fraction a few times 10–2) atomic region that may coexist with the warm molecular gas. If this is the case, the absorbing gas is ∼1 pc from the nucleus. We rule out the possibility that both absorptions occur in a fully ionized gas near 104 K. If our line of sight passes through more than one phase, the atomic gas probably dominates the free-free absorption, while the molecular gas may dominate the photoelectric absorption.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Accretion, Accretion Disks - Galaxies: Active - Galaxies: Individual: NGC Number: NGC 2639 - Galaxies: Nuclei - Galaxies: Seyfert - Radio Continuum: Galaxies

Simbad objects: 5

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:1998ApJ...505..587W and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu