NuSTAR observations of a heavily X-ray obscured AGN in the dwarf galaxy J144013+024744
Shrey. Ansh (University of Alabama Huntsville) Chien-Ting J. Chen, (USRA STI/MSFC), W. N. Brandt, Carol E. Hood, E. S. Kammoun, G. Lansbury,, St\'ephane Paltani, Amy E. Reines, C. Ricci, Douglas A. Swartz, Jonathan R., Trump, F. Vito, and Ryan C. Hickox

TL;DR
This study uses NuSTAR X-ray observations to reveal heavy obscuration in a dwarf galaxy's AGN, providing insights into the properties of intermediate-mass black holes and their surrounding environments.
Contribution
First X-ray spectroscopic evidence of obscuration in a dwarf galaxy's AGN, indicating that torus-like structures extend to low-mass black holes.
Findings
The AGN is heavily obscured with column density near Compton-thick levels.
The $[{ m OIV}]$ line better estimates the intrinsic X-ray luminosity.
The measured column density is among the highest for IMBH-powered AGNs.
Abstract
We present a multi-wavelength analysis of the dwarf Seyfert-2 galaxy J, a candidate obscured active galactic nucleus (AGN) thought to be powered by an intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH, ) of mass . To study its X-ray properties, we targeted J with NuSTAR for ks. The X-ray spectrum was fitted with absorbed power law, Pexmon and a physical model (RXTorus). A Bayesian X-ray analysis was performed to estimate the posteriors. The phenomenological and the physical models suggest the AGN to be heavily obscured by a column density of cm. In particular, the RXTorus model with a sub-solar metallicity suggests the obscuring column to be almost Compton-thick. We compared the keV intrinsic X-ray luminosity with the inferred X-ray…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
