posted on 2019-02-26, 15:16authored byJ. N. Reeves, V. Braito, E. Nardini, F. Hamann, G. Chartas, A. P. Lobban, Paul T. O'Brien, T. J. Turner
Simultaneous XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, and HST observations, performed in 2017 March, of the nearby (z = 0.184)
luminous quasar PDS 456 are presented. PDS 456 had a low X-ray flux compared to past observations, where the
first of the two new XMM-Newton observations occurred during a pronounced dip in the X-ray light curve. The
broadband X-ray spectrum is highly absorbed, attenuated by a soft X-ray absorber of column density
NH = 6 × 1022 cm−2
. An increase in obscuration occurs during the dip, which may be due to an X-ray eclipse. In
addition, the persistent, fast Fe K outflow is present, with velocity components of −0.25c and −0.4c. The soft
absorber is less ionized (log 3 x = ) compared to the iron K outflow (log 5 x = ) and is outflowing with a velocity of
approximately −0.2c. A soft X-ray excess is present below 1 keV against the highly absorbed continuum and can
be attributed to the re-emission from a wide-angle wind. The complex X-ray absorption present in PDS 456
suggests that the wind is inhomogeneous, whereby the soft X-ray absorber originates from denser clumps or
filaments that may form farther out along the outflow. In contrast to the X-ray observations, the simultaneous UV
spectrum of PDS 456 is largely unabsorbed, where only a very weak broad absorption trough is present blueward
of Lyα, compared to a past observation in 2000 when the trough was significantly stronger. The relative weakness
of the UV absorption may be due to the soft X-ray absorber being too highly ionized and almost transparent in the
UV band
History
Citation
Astrophysical Journal, 2018, 867:38
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy