NuSTAR reveals that the heavily obscured nucleus of NGC 2785 was the contaminant of IRAS 09104+4109 in the BeppoSAX/PDS hard X-rays
C. Vignali, P. Severgnini, E. Piconcelli, G. Lanzuisi, R. Gilli, M., Mignoli, A. Comastri, L. Ballo, K. Iwasawa, V. La Parola

TL;DR
NuSTAR observations revealed that NGC 2785's heavily obscured nucleus contaminated BeppoSAX/PDS data of IRAS 09104+4109, correcting its classification from Compton-thick to Compton-thin and clarifying its X-ray properties.
Contribution
This study demonstrates how NuSTAR data can identify contaminating sources in non-imaging X-ray observations, providing a physical characterization of NGC 2785's obscured nucleus.
Findings
NGC 2785 hosts a heavily obscured nucleus with NH~3×10^{24} cm^{-2}.
NGC 2785 contributed at least one third of the 20-100 keV emission in BeppoSAX/PDS data.
NGC 2785 was misclassified as a Compton-thick quasar; it is actually Compton-thin.
Abstract
The search for heavily obscured active galactic nuclei (AGNs) has been revitalized in the last five years by NuSTAR, which has provided a good census and spectral characterization of a population of such objects, mostly at low redshift, thanks to its enhanced sensitivity above 10 keV compared to previous X-ray facilities, and its hard X-ray imaging capabilities. We aim at demonstrating how NGC2785, a local (z=0.009) star-forming galaxy, is responsible, in virtue of its heavily obscured active nucleus, for significant contamination in the non-imaging BeppoSAX/PDS data of the relatively nearby (~17 arcmin) quasar IRAS 09104+4109 (z=0.44), which was originally mis-classified as Compton thick. We analyzed ~71 ks NuSTAR data of NGC2785 using the MYTorus model and provided a physical description of the X-ray properties of the source for the first time. We found that NGC2785 hosts a heavily…
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