Browsing by Author "Kawamuro, T."
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- ItemBASS. XLII. The Relation between the Covering Factor of Dusty Gas and the Eddington Ratio in Nearby Active Galactic NucleiRicci, C.; Ichikawa, K.; Stalevski, M.; Kawamuro, T.; Yamada, S.; Ueda, Y.; Mushotzky, R.; Privon, G. C.; Koss, M. J.; Trakhtenbrot, B.; Fabian, A. C.; Ho, L. C.; Asmus, D.; Bauer, Franz Erik; Chang, C. S.; Gupta, K. K.; Oh, K.; Powell, M.; Pfeifle, R. W.; Rojas, A.; Ricci, F.; Temple, M. J.; Toba, Y.; Tortosa, A.; Treister, Ezequiel; Harrison, F.; Stern, D.; Urry, C. M.Accreting supermassive black holes (SMBHs) located at the centers of galaxies are typically surrounded by large quantities of gas and dust. The structure and evolution of this circumnuclear material can be studied at different wavelengths, from the submillimeter to the X-ray. Recent X-ray studies have shown that the covering factor of the obscuring material tends to decrease with increasing Eddington ratio, likely due to radiative feedback on dusty gas. Here we study a sample of 549 nearby (z less than or similar to 0.1) hard X-ray (14-195 keV) selected nonblazar active galactic nuclei (AGN) and use the ratio between the AGN infrared and bolometric luminosity as a proxy of the covering factor. We find that, in agreement with what has been found by X-ray studies of the same sample, the covering factor decreases with increasing Eddington ratio. We also confirm previous findings that showed that obscured AGN typically have larger covering factors than unobscured sources. Finally, we find that the median covering factors of AGN located in different regions of the column density-Eddington ratio diagram are in good agreement with what would be expected from a radiation-regulated growth of SMBHs.
- ItemBAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey XXVII: scattered X-Ray radiation in obscured active galactic nuclei(2021) Gupta, K. K.; Ricci, C.; Tortosa, A.; Ueda, Y.; Kawamuro, T.; Koss, M.; Trakhtenbrot, B.; Oh, K.; Bauer, F. E.; Ricci, F.; Privon, G. C.; Zappacosta, L.; Stern, D.; Kakkad, D.; Piconcelli, E.; Veilleux, S.; Mushotzky, R.; Caglar, T.; Ichikawa, K.; Elagali, A.; Powell, M. C.; Urry, C. M.; Harrison, F.Accreting supermassive black holes (SMBHs), also known as active galactic nuclei (AGN), are generally surrounded by large amounts of gas and dust. This surrounding material reprocesses the primary X-ray emission produced close to the SMBH and gives rise to several components in the broadband X-ray spectra of AGN, including a power-law possibly associated with Thomson-scattered radiation. In this work, we study the properties of this scattered component for a sample of 386 hard-X-ray-selected, nearby (z similar to 0.03) obscured AGN from the 70-month Swift/BAT catalogue. We investigate how the fraction of Thomson-scattered radiation correlates with different physical properties of AGN, such as line-of-sight column density, X-ray luminosity, black hole mass, and Eddington ratio. We find a significant negative correlation between the scattering fraction and the column density. Based on a large number of spectral simulations, we exclude the possibility that this anticorrelation is due to degeneracies between the parameters. The negative correlation also persists when considering different ranges of luminosity, black hole mass, and Eddington ratio. We discuss how this correlation might be either due to the angle dependence of the Thomson cross-section or to more obscured sources having a higher covering factor of the torus. We also find a positive correlation between the scattering fraction and the ratio of [OIII] lambda 5007 to X-ray luminosity. This result is consistent with previous studies and suggests that the Thomson-scattered component is associated with the narrow-line region.
- ItemJoint ALMA/X-ray monitoring of the radio-quiet type 1 active galactic nucleus IC 4329A(2024) Shablovinskaya, E.; Ricci, C.; Chang, C. -s.; Tortosa, A.; del Palacio, S.; Kawamuro, T.; Aalto, S.; Arzoumanian, Z.; Balokovic, M.; Bauer, F. E.; Gendreau, K. C.; Ho, L. C.; Kakkad, D.; Kara, E.; Koss, M. J.; Liu, T.; Loewenstein, M.; Mushotzky, R.; Paltani, S.; Privon, G. C.; Smith, K.; Tombesi, F.; Trakhtenbrot, B.The origin of a compact millimeter (mm, 100-250 GHz) emission in radio-quiet active galactic nuclei (RQ AGN) remains debated. Recent studies propose a connection with self-absorbed synchrotron emission from the accretion disk X-ray corona. We present the first joint ALMA (similar to 100 GHz) and X-ray (NICER/XMM-Newton/Swift; 2-10 keV) observations of the unobscured RQ AGN, IC 4329A (z = 0.016). The time-averaged mm-to-X-ray flux ratio aligns with recently established trends for larger samples, but with a tighter scatter (similar to 0.1 dex) compared to previous studies. However, there is no significant correlation on timescales of less than 20 days. The compact mm emission exhibits a spectral index of -0.23 +/- 0.18, remains unresolved with a 13 pc upper limit, and shows no jet signatures. Notably, the mm flux density varies significantly (by factor of 3) within four days, exceeding the contemporaneous X-ray variability and showing the largest mm variations ever detected in RQ AGN over daily timescales. The high amplitude variability rules out scenarios of heated dust and thermal free-free emission, pointing toward a synchrotron origin for the mm radiation in a source of similar to 1 light day (similar to 120 gravitational radii) size. While the exact source is not yet certain, an X-ray corona scenario emerges as the most plausible compared to a scaled-down jet or outflow-driven shocks.