Transient obscuration event captured in NGC 3227. I. Continuum model for the broadband spectral energy distribution
M. Mehdipour, G. A. Kriss, J. S. Kaastra, Y. Wang, J. Mao, E., Costantini, N. Arav, E. Behar, S. Bianchi, G. Branduardi-Raymont, M., Brotherton, M. Cappi, B. De Marco, L. Di Gesu, J. Ebrero, S. Grafton-Waters,, S. Kaspi, G. Matt, S. Paltani, P.-O. Petrucci, C. Pinto, G. Ponti

TL;DR
This study models the broadband spectral energy distribution of NGC 3227 during a transient obscuration event, revealing details about the accretion disk, reddening, and obscuring gas properties using multi-instrument observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive continuum model of NGC 3227 from NIR to X-rays during an obscuration event, incorporating new and archival data to understand the spectral components and obscuring gas.
Findings
The NIR-optical-UV continuum is explained by an accretion disk blackbody with Tmax=10 eV.
The internal reddening is E(B-V)=0.45, likely from outflows of the dusty torus.
A new obscuring gas with NH=5e+22 cm^-2 partially covers the X-ray source.
Abstract
From Swift monitoring of a sample of active galactic nuclei (AGN) we found a transient X-ray obscuration event in Seyfert-1 galaxy NGC 3227, and thus triggered our joint XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, and Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations to study this event. Here in the first paper of our series we present the broadband continuum modelling of the spectral energy distribution (SED) for NGC 3227, extending from near infrared (NIR) to hard X-rays. We use our new spectra taken with XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, and HST/COS in 2019, together with archival unobscured XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, and HST/STIS data, in order to disentangle various spectral components of NGC 3227 and recover the underlying continuum. We find the observed NIR-optical-UV continuum is explained well by an accretion disk blackbody component (Tmax = 10 eV), which is internally reddened by E(B-V) = 0.45 with a Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
