Discovery of a deep Seyfert-2 galaxy at z = 0.222 behind NGC 300
J. A. Combi, F. Garcia, M. J. Rodriguez, R. Gamen, and S. A. Cellone

TL;DR
This study identifies a previously unknown Seyfert-2 galaxy at redshift 0.222 behind NGC 300, using multi-wavelength data to analyze its optical and X-ray properties, confirming its active galactic nucleus nature and variability.
Contribution
First identification and detailed characterization of a Seyfert-2 galaxy behind NGC 300 through combined optical and X-ray observations, revealing its redshift, structure, and variability.
Findings
The galaxy is at z=0.222, not related to NGC 300.
X-ray spectra show long-term variability in flux and spectral index.
X-ray luminosity consistent with a weakly obscured Seyfert-2 AGN.
Abstract
We report on the unveiling of the nature of the unidentified X-ray source 3XMM J005450.3-373849 as a Seyfert-2 galaxy located behind the spiral galaxy NGC 300 using Hubble Space Telescope data, new spectroscopic Gemini observations and available XMM-Newton and Chandra data. We show that the X-ray source is positionally coincident with an extended optical source, composed by a marginally resolved nucleus/bulge, surrounded by an elliptical disc-like feature and two symmetrical outer rings. The optical spectrum is typical of a Seyfert-2 galaxy redshifted to z=0.222 +/- 0.001, which confirms that the source is not physically related to NGC 300. At this redshift the source would be located at 909+/-4 Mpc (comoving distance in the standard model). The X-ray spectra of the source are well-fitted by an absorbed power-law model. By tying between the six available spectra, we found…
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