Direct Measurement of the X-ray Time-Delay Transfer Function in Active Galactic Nuclei
E. Legg, L. Miller, T. J. Turner, M. Giustini, J. N. Reeves, S. B., Kraemer

TL;DR
This study measures the X-ray time-delay transfer function in active galactic nuclei, revealing reverberation effects caused by circumnuclear scattering, and challenges simple fluctuation propagation models.
Contribution
It provides the first direct measurement of the X-ray transfer function in AGN, demonstrating reverberation effects and constraining models of X-ray time lags.
Findings
Peaks occur simultaneously across X-ray energies.
Hard X-ray excess is delayed relative to main peaks.
Evidence supports reverberation from circumnuclear material.
Abstract
The origin of the observed time lags, in nearby active galactic nuclei (AGN), between hard and soft X-ray photons is investigated using new XMM-Newton data for the narrow-line Seyfert I galaxy Ark 564 and existing data for 1H0707-495 and NGC 4051. These AGN have highly variable X-ray light curves that contain frequent, high peaks of emission. The averaged light curve of the peaks is directly measured from the time series, and it is shown that (i) peaks occur at the same time, within the measurement uncertainties, at all X-ray energies, and (ii) there exists a substantial tail of excess emission at hard X-ray energies, which is delayed with respect to the time of the main peak, and is particularly prominent in Ark 564. Observation (i) rules out that the observed lags are caused by Comptonization time delays and disfavors a simple model of propagating fluctuations on the accretion disk.…
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