Browsing by Author "Cappi, M."
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemNuSTAR. reveals the extreme properties of the super-Eddington accreting supermassive black hole in PG. 1247+267(2016) Lanzuisi, G.; Perna, M.; Comastri, A.; Cappi, M.; Dadina, M.; Marinucci, A.; Masini, A.; Matt, G.; Vagnetti, F.; Bauer, Franz Erik; Vignali, C.; Ballantyne, D.; Boggs, S.; Brandt, W.; Brusa, M.; Craig, W.; Ricci, Claudio
- ItemThe soft-X-ray emission of Ark 120. XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, and the importance of taking the broad view(OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2014) Matt, G.; Marinucci, A.; Guainazzi, M.; Brenneman, L. W.; Elvis, M.; Lohfink, A.; Arevalo, P.; Boggs, S. E.; Cappi, M.; Christensen, F. E.; Craig, W. W.; Fabian, A. C.; Fuerst, F.; Hailey, C. J.; Harrison, F. A.; Parker, M.; Reynolds, C. S.; Stern, D.; Walton, D. J.; Zhang, W. W.We present simultaneous XMM-Newton and NuSTAR observations of the 'bare' Seyfert 1 galaxy, Ark 120, a system in which ionized absorption is absent. The NuSTAR hard-X-ray spectral coverage allows us to constrain different models for the excess soft-X-ray emission. Among phenomenological models, a cutoff power law best explains the soft-X-ray emission. This model likely corresponds to Comptonization of the accretion disc seed UV photons by a population of warm electrons: using Comptonization models, a temperature of similar to 0.3 keV and an optical depth of similar to 13 are found. If the UV-to-X-ray optxagnf model is applied, the UV fluxes from the XMM-Newton Optical Monitor suggest an intermediate black hole spin. Contrary to several other sources observed by NuSTAR, no high-energy cutoff is detected with a lower limit of 190 keV.