Short timescale variations of the H{\alpha} double-peaked profile of the nucleus of NGC 1097
Jaderson S. Schimoia (1), Thaisa Storchi-Bergmann (1), Rodrigo S., Nemmen (2), Cl\'audia Winge (3), Michael Eracleous (4) ((1) Universidade, Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, (2) NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, (3), Gemini South Observatory, (4) Pennsylvania State University)

TL;DR
This study analyzes short-term variations in the double-peaked Hα emission profile of NGC 1097, revealing insights into accretion disk dynamics and black hole environment through spectroscopic monitoring and modeling.
Contribution
The paper presents new spectroscopic observations and models of NGC 1097's accretion disk, identifying rapid variability timescales and constraining the disk's structure and black hole mass.
Findings
Detected a 7-day reverberation timescale indicating the light crossing time.
Identified a 5-month timescale consistent with spiral arm rotation.
Constrained the spiral pattern rotation period to approximately 18 months.
Abstract
The broad (FWHM ~ 10,000 km/s) double-peaked H{\alpha} profile from the LINER/Seyfert 1 nucleus of NGC 1097 was discovered in 1991, and monitored for the following 11 years. The profile showed variations attributed to the rotation of gas in a non-axisymmetric Keplerian accretion disk, ionized by a varying radiatively inefficient accretion flow (RIAF) located in the inner parts of the disk. We present and model 11 new spectroscopic observations of the double-peaked profile taken between 2010 March and 2011 March. This series of observations was motivated by the finding that in 2010 March the flux in the double-peaked line was again strong, becoming, in 2010 December, even stronger than in the observations of a decade ago. We also discovered shorter timescale variations than in the previous observations: (1) the first, of ~7 days, is interpreted as due to "reverberation" of the variation…
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