$NuSTAR$ Observations of Four Nearby X-ray Faint AGN: Low Luminosity or Heavy Obscuration?
A. Annuar (UKM), D. M. Alexander, P. Gandhi, G. B. Lansbury, D. Asmus,, M. Balokovic, D. R. Ballantyne, F. E. Bauer, P. G. Boorman, W. N. Brandt, M., Brightman, C.-T. J. Chen, A. Del Moro, D. Farrah, F. A. Harrison, M. J. Koss,, L. Lanz, S. Marchesi, A. Masini, E. Nardini

TL;DR
This study uses NuSTAR, Chandra, and XMM-Newton data to analyze four nearby low-luminosity AGN, revealing diverse levels of obscuration and changes over time, with implications for their intrinsic power and dust environment.
Contribution
It provides the first broadband X-ray spectral analysis of these four LLAGN, identifying heavily obscured and unobscured cases, and highlights variability and dust presence in low-luminosity AGN.
Findings
ESO 121-G6 and NGC 660 are heavily obscured, possibly Compton-thick.
NGC 3486 and NGC 5195 are unobscured or mildly obscured LLAGN.
Significant X-ray spectral and flux variability observed in ESO 121-G6.
Abstract
We present observations of four active galactic nuclei (AGN) located within 15 Mpc. These AGN, namely ESO 121-G6, NGC 660, NGC 3486 and NGC 5195, have observed X-ray luminosities of 10 erg s, classifying them as low luminosity AGN (LLAGN). We perform broadband X-ray spectral analysis for the AGN by combining our data with or observations to directly measure their column densities () and infer their intrinsic power. We complement our X-ray data with archival and new high angular resolution mid-infrared (mid-IR) data for all objects, except NGC 5195. Based on our X-ray spectral analysis, we found that both ESO 121-G6 and NGC 660 are heavily obscured ( > 10 cm; 10 erg s), and NGC 660 may be Compton-thick. We also note that…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
