Suzaku observations of Mrk 335: Confronting partial covering and relativistic reflection
L. C. Gallo, D. R. Wilkins, K. Bonson, C-Y. Chiang, D. Grupe, M. L., Parker, A. Zoghbi, A. C. Fabian, S. Komossa, A. L. Longinotti

TL;DR
This study uses Suzaku X-ray observations to analyze the low and high flux states of Mrk 335, finding that relativistic reflection models better explain the data than partial covering, and revealing changes in the corona and ionization state.
Contribution
It demonstrates that relativistic reflection models are more consistent than partial covering for explaining flux variability in Mrk 335, and provides detailed insights into the corona and ionization changes.
Findings
Relativistic reflection explains flux states better than partial covering.
The corona is more compact during low-flux states, extending only to about 5 rg.
Ionization parameter inversely correlates with reflected flux after a flare.
Abstract
We report on the deepest X-ray observation of the narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 335 in the low-flux state obtained with Suzaku. The data are compared to a 2006 high-flux Suzaku observation when the source was ~10-times brighter. Describing the two flux levels self-consistently with partial covering models would require extreme circumstances, as the source would be subject to negligible absorption during the bright state and ninety-five per cent covering with near Compton-thick material when dim. Blurred reflection from an accretion disc around a nearly maximum spinning black hole (a>0.91, with preference for a spin parameter as high as ~ 0.995) appears more likely and is consistent with the long-term and rapid variability. Measurements of the emissivity profile and spectral modelling indicate the high-flux Suzaku observation of Mrk 335 is consistent with continuum-dominated, jet-like…
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