The weak neutral Fe fluorescence line and long-term X-ray evolution of the Compton-thick AGN in NGC 7674
P. Gandhi (Southampton), A. Annuar, G.B. Lansbury, D. Stern, D.M., Alexander, F.E. Bauer, S. Bianchi, S.E. Boggs, P.G. Boorman, W.N. Brandt, M., Brightman, F.E. Christensen, A. Comastri, W.W. Craig, A. Del Moro, M. Elvis,, M. Guainazzi, C.J. Hailey, F.A. Harrison, M. Koss

TL;DR
This study uses NuSTAR X-ray data to analyze the Compton-thick AGN in NGC 7674, revealing a reflection-dominated spectrum with weak neutral Fe Kα emission, and challenges previous switch-off hypotheses by long-term flux stability.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed long-term X-ray analysis of NGC 7674, demonstrating the plausibility of a patchy Compton-thick AGN model over the switch-off scenario.
Findings
The 2-10 keV flux has remained constant for ~20 years.
The neutral Fe Kα line is unusually weak among CTAGNs.
A patchy Compton-thick model with high column density is favored.
Abstract
We present X-ray observations of the active galactic nucleus (AGN) in NGC 7674. The source shows a flat X-ray spectrum, suggesting that it is obscured by Compton-thick gas columns. Based upon long-term flux dimming, previous work suggested the alternate possibility that the source is a recently switched-off AGN with the observed X-rays being the lagged echo from the torus. Our high-quality data show the source to be reflection-dominated in hard X-rays, but with a relatively weak neutral Fe K emission line (equivalent width [EW] of 0.4 keV) and a strong Fe XXVI ionised line (EW 0.2 keV). We construct an updated long-term X-ray light curve of NGC 7674 and find that the observed 2-10 keV flux has remained constant for the past 20 years, following a high flux state probed by . Light travel time arguments constrain the minimum radius of…
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