posted on 2012-10-24, 09:05authored byM. Santos-Lleo, J. Clavel, B. Schulz, B. Altieri, P. Barr, D. Alloin, P. Berlind, R. Bertram, D. M. Crenshaw, R. A. Edelson, U. Giveon, K. Horne, J. P. Huchra, S. Kaspi, G. A. Kriss, J. H. Krolik, M. A. Malkan, Y. F. Malkov, H. Netzer, P. T. O'Brien, B. M. Peterson, R. W. Pogge, V. I. Pronik, B. C. Qian, G. A. Reichert, P. M. Rodriguez-Pascual, S. G. Sergeev, J. Tao, S. Tokarz, R. M. Wagner, W. Wamsteker, B. J. Wilkes
Mid-infrared images of the Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 279 obtained with the ISO satellite are presented together with the results of a one-year monitoring campaign of the 2.5-11.7 $\mu$m spectrum. Contemporaneous optical photometric and spectrophotometric observations are also presented. The galaxy appears as a point-like source at the resolution of the ISOCAM instrument (4-5$\arcsec$). The 2.5-11.7 $\mu$m average spectrum of the nucleus in Mrk 279 shows a strong power law continuum with $\alpha = -0.80\pm0.05$ ( ${ F_{ u} \propto u^{\alpha}}$) and weak PAH emission features. The Mrk 279 spectral energy distribution shows a mid-IR bump, which extends from 2 to 15-20 $\mu$m. The mid-IR bump is consistent with thermal emission from dust grains at a distance of $\ga 100$ lt-d. No significant variations of the mid-IR flux have been detected during our observing campaign, consistent with the relatively low amplitude (~10% rms) of the optical variability during the campaign. The time delay for H$\beta$ line emission in response to the optical continuum variations is $\tau = 16.7^{+5.3}_{-5.6}$ days, consistent with previous measurements.
History
Citation
Astronomy & Astrophysics, 2001, 369 (1), pp. 57-64
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Publisher
EDP Sciences for European Southern Observatory (ESO)