X-ray narrow emission lines from the nuclear region of NGC 1365
M. Whewell, G. Branduardi-Raymont, M. J. Page

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray narrow emission lines in NGC 1365 using XMM RGS data from multiple years, revealing complex ionized gas phases and estimating their proximity to the galaxy's nucleus.
Contribution
It provides a detailed physical model of the narrow emission line regions in NGC 1365, combining multiple ionization phases and comparing data across different epochs.
Findings
The X-ray spectrum is modeled by two collisionally ionized and three photoionized gas phases.
The emission line spectrum indicates higher than solar nitrogen abundances.
The photoionized gas is located within 300 parsecs of the nucleus.
Abstract
NGC 1365 is a Seyfert 2 galaxy with a starburst ring in its nuclear region. In this work we look at the XMM Reflection Grating Spectrometer (RGS) data from four 2012-13, three 2007 and two 2004 observations of NGC 1365. We characterise the narrow-line emitting gas visible by XMM RGS and make comparisons between the 2012-13 spectra and those from 2004-07, already published. This source is usually absorbed within the soft X-ray band, with a typical neutral column density of >1.5 x 10 cm, and only 1 observation of the 9 we investigate shows low enough absorption for the continuum to emerge in the soft X-rays. We stack all observations from 2004-07, and separately three of the four observations from 2012-13, analysing the less absorbed observation separately. We first model the spectra using gaussian profiles representing the narrow line emission. We fit physically motivated…
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