Broadband Observations of the Compton-thick Nucleus of NGC 3393
Michael J. Koss, C. Romero-Canizales, L. Baronchelli, S. H. Teng, M., Balokovic, S. Puccetti, F.E. Bauer, P. Arevalo, R. Assef, D.R. Ballantyne, W., N. Brandt, M. Brightman, A. Comastri, P. Gandhi, F. A. Harrison, B. Luo, K., Schawinski, D. Stern, and E. Treister

TL;DR
Deep X-ray and radio observations of NGC 3393 reveal it hosts a single, heavily obscured AGN with jet activity, disproving previous claims of a dual AGN based on limited data and statistical noise.
Contribution
This study clarifies the nature of NGC 3393's nucleus, demonstrating it is a single AGN with complex obscuration and jet features, correcting prior dual AGN claims.
Findings
NGC 3393 hosts a single, heavily obscured AGN with jet activity.
Previous dual AGN detection was due to statistical noise and data smoothing artifacts.
NuSTAR confirms the Compton-thick nature with high column density.
Abstract
We present new NuSTAR and Chandra observations of NGC 3393, a galaxy reported to host the smallest separation dual AGN resolved in the X-rays. While past results suggested a 150 pc separation dual AGN, three times deeper Chandra imaging, combined with adaptive optics and radio imaging suggest a single, heavily obscured, radio-bright AGN. Using VLA and VLBA data, we find an AGN with a two-sided jet rather than a dual AGN and that the hard X-ray, UV, optical, NIR, and radio emission are all from a single point source with a radius <0.2". We find that the previously reported dual AGN is most likely a spurious detection resulting from the low number of X-ray counts (<160) at 6-7 keV and Gaussian smoothing of the data on scales much smaller than the PSF (0.25" vs. 0.80" FWHM). We show that statistical noise in a single Chandra PSF generates spurious dual peaks of the same separation…
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