Abstract

We present the results of our study of the long term X-ray variability characteristics of the Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy RE J1034+396. We use data obtained from the AstroSat satellite along with the light curves obtained from XMM-Newton and Swift-XRT. We use the 0.3 - 7.0 keV and 3 - 20 keV data, respectively, from the SXT and the LAXPC of AstroSat. The X-ray spectra in the 0.3 - 20 keV region are well fit with a model consisting of a power-law and a soft excess described by a thermal-Compton emission with a large optical depth, consistent with the earlier reported results. We have examined the X-ray light curves in the soft and hard X-ray bands of SXT and LAXPC, respectively, and find that the variability is slightly larger in the hard band. To investigate the variability characteristics of this source at different time scales, we have used X-ray light curves obtained from XMM-Newton data (200 s to 100 ks range) and Swift-XRT data (1 day to 100 day range) and find that there are evidences to suggest that the variability sharply increases at longer time scales. We argue that the mass of the black hole in RE J1034+396 is likely to be $\sim$3 $\times$ 10$^6$ M$_\odot$, based on the similarity of the observed QPO to the high frequency QPO seen in the Galactic black hole binary, GRS 1915+105.

Highlights

  • The active galactic nucleus (AGN) RE J1034+396 at redshift z = 0.042 is a narrow-line Seyfert 1-galaxy (NLS1) (Pounds, Done, & Osborne 1995; Mason, Puchnarewicz, & Jones 1996; Breeveld & Puchnarewicz 1998; Puchnarewicz, Mason, & Siemiginowska 1998)

  • We present the results from our investigation of the long-term X-ray variability characteristics of RE J1034+396 using AstroSat data along with archival XMM–Newton and Swift–XRT data

  • Comparing to GRS 1915+105, which has a mass of ∼12.9 ± 2.4 M (Hurley et al 2013), this period could be the regular C-type quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO) seen at a few Hz in the hard state of low-mass black hole sources (Reig et al 2000), and would imply a black hole mass of ∼105 M in RE J1034+396

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The active galactic nucleus (AGN) RE J1034+396 ( known as Zw212.025) at redshift z = 0.042 is a narrow-line Seyfert 1-galaxy (NLS1) (Pounds, Done, & Osborne 1995; Mason, Puchnarewicz, & Jones 1996; Breeveld & Puchnarewicz 1998; Puchnarewicz, Mason, & Siemiginowska 1998) It was first observed during the ROSAT WFC All-Sky Survey in 1990 (Pounds et al 1993). Examining a wide-band spectral energy distribution (SED) of this source, Done et al (2012) suggest that the spectrum consists of three components: a black body from the disc (representing the BBB), a hard coronal component (power law at high energies), and a low-temperature high-optical-depth Comptonization of the disc emission in the soft X-ray region. We discuss the results in the context of the mass of the black hole in this source

ASTROSAT O B S E RVAT I O N S
SXT observations
LAXPC observations
Spectral analysis
SWIFT A N D XMM–NEWTON O B S E RVAT I O N S
Swift observations
21 April 2016 May 31–2007 June 1
XMM–Newton observations
DISCUSSION
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