9–12 Oct 2018
Royal Observatory of Belgium
UTC timezone
<br>2nd BINA Workshop<br><br>BINA as an expanding international collaboration<P><img src="https://events.oma.be/indico/event/48/picture/0.jpg" width="279" height="75">

Complex X-ray/ultraviolet/optical variabilities of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 4593

10 Oct 2018, 15:40
20m
Meridian Room (Royal Observatory of Belgium)

Meridian Room

Royal Observatory of Belgium

Ringlaan 3, 1180 Brussels, Belgium
Contributed Talk 2.3. Data & Science with the Indo-Belgian telescopes 2. Data & Science with the Indo-Belgian telescopes

Speaker

Dr SACHINDRA NAIK (PHYSICAL RESEARCH LABORATORY, AHMEDABAD, INDIA)

Description

We present a detailed multi-frequency analysis of an intense monitoring programme of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 4593 over a duration of nearly a month with the Swift observatory. We used 185 pointings to study the variability in six ultraviolet/optical and two soft (0.3-1.5 keV) and hard X-ray (1.5-10 keV) bands. The amplitude of the observed variability is found to decrease from high energy to low energy (X-ray to optical) bands. Count-count plots of ultraviolet/optical bands with hard X-rays clearly suggest the presence of a mixture of two major components: (i) highly variable component such as hard X-ray emission, and (ii) slowly varying disc-like component. The variations observed in the ultraviolet/optical emission are strongly correlated with the hard X-ray band. Cross-correlation analysis provides the lags for the longer wavelengths compared to the hard X-rays. Such lags clearly suggest that the changes in the ultraviolet/optical bands follow the variations in the hard X-ray band. This implies that the observed variation in longer wavelengths is due to X-ray reprocessing. Though, the measured lag spectrum (lag versus wavelength) is well described by λ^4/3 as expected from the standard disc model, the observed lags are found to be longer than the predicted values from standard disc model. This implies that the actual size of the disc of NGC 4593 is larger than the estimated size of standard thin disc.

Primary author

Dr SACHINDRA NAIK (PHYSICAL RESEARCH LABORATORY, AHMEDABAD, INDIA)

Co-author

Dr Main Pal (Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad, India)

Presentation materials