Insights on the X-ray weak quasar phenomenon from XMM-Newton monitoring of PHL 1092
G. Miniutti, W. N. Brandt, D. P. Schneider, A. C. Fabian, L. C. Gallo, and Th. Boller

TL;DR
This study monitors the X-ray weak quasar PHL 1092 over 10 years, analyzing its extreme X-ray variability and exploring models like corona changes, absorption, and reflection to explain its spectral energy distribution.
Contribution
It provides the first long-term XMM-Newton monitoring of PHL 1092, testing multiple physical models to explain its X-ray weakness and variability.
Findings
X-ray flux variability is driven by long-term changes.
The corona may collapse or expand with flux changes.
Absorption could explain apparent X-ray weakness.
Abstract
PHL 1092 is a z~0.4 high-luminosity counterpart of the class of Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 galaxies. In 2008, PHL 1092 was found to be in a remarkably low X-ray flux state during an XMM-Newton observation. Its 2 keV flux density had dropped by a factor of ~260 with respect to a previous observation performed 4.5 yr earlier. The UV flux remained almost constant, resulting in a significant steepening of the optical-to-X-ray slope alpha_ox from -1.57 to -2.51, making PHL 1092 one of the most extreme X-ray weak quasars with no observed broad absorption lines (BALs) in the UV. We have monitored the source since 2008 with three further XMM-Newton observations, producing a simultaneous UV and X-ray database spanning almost 10 yr in total in the activity of the source. Our monitoring program demonstrates that the alpha_ox variability in PHL 1092 is entirely driven by long-term X-ray flux changes. We…
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