Transient obscuration event captured in NGC 3227 III. Photoionization modeling of the X-ray obscuration event in 2019
Junjie Mao, J. S. Kaastra, M. Mehdipour, G. A. Kriss, Yijun Wang, S., Grafton-Waters, G. Branduardi-Raymont, C. Pinto, H. Landt, D. J. Walton, E., Costantini, L. Di Gesu, S. Bianchi, P.-O. Petrucci, B. De Marco, G. Ponti,, Yasushi Fukazawa, J. Ebrero, and E. Behar

TL;DR
This study analyzes a transient X-ray obscuration event in NGC 3227 in 2019 using photoionization modeling, revealing its short duration and complex properties, and compares it with previous events to understand their diversity.
Contribution
The paper presents a detailed photoionization modeling of the 2019 X-ray obscuration event in NGC 3227, highlighting its short-lived nature and the challenges in constraining its geometry and physical parameters.
Findings
The 2019 obscuration event lasted less than five months.
The same obscurer cannot explain both X-ray observations in late 2019.
No prominent UV absorption features were detected during the event.
Abstract
A growing number of transient X-ray obscuration events in type I AGN suggest that our line-of-sight to the central engine is not always free. Multiple X-ray obscuration events have been reported in the nearby Seyfert 1.5 galaxy NGC 3227 from 2000 to 2016. In late 2019, another X-ray obscuration event was identified with Swift. Two coordinated target-of-opportunity observations with XMM-Newton, NuSTAR, and HST/COS were triggered in Nov. and Dec. 2019 to study this obscuration event. For each observation, we analyze the time-averaged X-ray spectra. We perform photoionization modeling with the SPEX code, which allows us to constrain the intrinsic continuum simultaneously with various photoionized absorption and emission components. Similar to previous transient X-ray obscuration events in NGC 3227, the one caught in late 2019 is short-lived (less than five months). If the obscurer has only…
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