The influence of soft spectral components on the structure and stability of warm absorbers in AGN

Jan, 2012
16 pages
Published in:
  • Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 422 (2012) 637
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20122015201820212023120
Abstract: (arXiv)
The radiation from the central regions of active galactic nuclei, including that from the accretion disk surrounding the black hole, is likely to peak in the extreme ultraviolet 13100\sim 13 -100 eV. However, due to Galactic absorption, we are limited to constrain the physical properties, i.e. the black hole mass and the accretion rate, from what observations we have below 10\sim 10 eV or above 100\sim 100 eV. In this paper we predict the thermal and ionization states of warm absorbers as a function of the shape of the unobservable continuum. In particular we model an accretion disk at kTin10kT_{in} \sim 10 eV and a {\it soft excess} at kTse150kT_{se} \sim 150 eV. The warm absorber, which is the highly ionized gas along the line of sight to the continuum, shows signatures in the 0.32\sim 0.3 - 2 keV energy range consisting of numerous absorption lines and edges of various ions, some of the prominent ones being H- and He-like oxygen, neon, magnesium and silicon. We find that the properties of the warm absorber are significantly influenced by the changes in the temperature of the accretion disk, as well as by the strength of the {\it soft excess}, as they affect the optical depth particularly for iron and oxygen. These trends may help develop a method of characterising the shape of the unobservable continuum and the occurrence of warm absorbers.
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