X-ray reverberation as an explanation for UV/optical variability in nearby Seyferts
M. Papoutsis, I. E. Papadakis, C. Panagiotou, M. Dov\v{c}iak, and E., Kammoun

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the X-ray reverberation model can simultaneously explain the UV/optical variability and time lags observed in nearby Seyfert galaxies, supporting the idea that X-ray illumination drives these variations.
Contribution
It shows that the X-ray reverberation model can account for both the time lags and variability amplitude in UV/optical light curves of Seyferts, using archival data and transfer function modeling.
Findings
X-ray reverberation explains UV/optical variability and time lags.
The model fits observed variances with consistent physical parameters.
The accretion disc remains constant, with X-ray illumination causing observed variations.
Abstract
Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) are known to be variable across all wavelengths. Significant observational efforts have been invested in the last decade in studying their ultraviolet (UV) and optical variability. Long and densely sampled, multi-wavelength monitoring campaigns of numerous Seyfert galaxies have been conducted with the aim of determining the X-ray/UV/optical continuum time lags. Time-lag studies can be used to constrain theoretical models. The observed time lags can be explained by thermal reprocessing of the X-rays illuminating the accretion disc (known as the X-ray reverberation model). However, the observed light curves contain more information that can be used to further constrain physical models. Our primary objective is to investigate whether, in addition to time lags, the X-ray reverberation model can also explain the UV/optical variability amplitude of nearby…
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.
