Physical Conditions in the X-ray Emission-line Gas in NGC 1068
S. B. Kraemer, N. Sharma, T. J. Turner, Ian M. George, and D. Michael, Crenshaw

TL;DR
This study uses detailed photoionization modeling of X-ray spectra from NGC 1068 to understand the physical conditions, elemental abundances, and kinematics of the emission-line gas, revealing insights into the AGN outflow and narrow line region.
Contribution
It provides a two-component photoionization model fitting X-ray emission lines, highlighting the gas properties and mass, and linking X-ray and optical emission regions in NGC 1068.
Findings
Emission lines are consistent with photoionization, not collisional ionization.
Unusual elemental abundances suggest star-formation history effects.
X-ray gas mass exceeds optical ionized gas, indicating it dominates the narrow line region.
Abstract
We present a detailed, photoionization modeling analysis of XMM-Newton/Reflection Grating Spectrometer observations of the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 1068. The spectrum, previously analyzed by Kinkhabwala et al. (2002), reveals a myriad of soft-Xray emission lines, including those from H- and He-like carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and neon, and M- and L-shell iron. As noted in the earlier analysis, based on the narrowness of the radiative recombination continua, the electron temperatures in the emission-line gas are consistent with photoionization, rather than collisional ionization. The strengths of the carbon and nitrogen emission lines, relative to those of oxygen, suggest unusual elemental abundances, which we attribute to star-formation history of the host galaxy. Overall, the emission-lines are blue-shifted with respect to systemic, with radial velocities ~ 160 km/s, similar to that of [O…
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