An outburst scenario for the X-ray spectral variability in 3C 111
F. Tombesi (1,2), J. N. Reeves (3), C. S. Reynolds (2), J. Garcia, (2,4), A. Lohfink (2) ((1) NASA/GSFC, (2) University of Maryland, College, Park, (3) Keele University, (4) Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics)

TL;DR
This study analyzes broad-band X-ray spectra of 3C 111, revealing a weak reflection component, a high-energy cutoff consistent with corona models, and evidence of an ultra-fast outflow, proposing an outburst scenario involving an accretion disc wind.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed broadband spectral analysis of 3C 111 with combined Suzaku and Swift BAT data, and proposes a novel outburst scenario involving a transient accretion disc wind crossing our line of sight.
Findings
Detection of a high-energy cutoff at 150-200 keV supporting corona models.
Identification of an ultra-fast outflow with v_out ~ 0.1c.
Evidence for a transient accretion disc wind causing spectral variability.
Abstract
We present a combined Suzaku and Swift BAT broad-band E=0.6-200keV spectral analysis of three 3C 111 observations obtained in 2010. The data are well described with an absorbed power-law continuum and a weak (R~0.2) cold reflection component from distant material. We constrain the continuum cutoff at E_c~150-200keV, which is in accordance with X-ray Comptonization corona models and supports claims that the jet emission is only dominant at much higher energies. Fe XXVI Ly\alpha emission and absorption lines are also present in the first and second observations, respectively. The modelling and interpretation of the emission line is complex and we explore three possibilities. If originating from ionized disc reflection, this should be emitted at r_in> 50r_g or, in the lamp-post configuration, the illuminating source should be at a height of h> 30r_g over the black hole. Alternatively, the…
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