XRISM Discovery of Multiple Ionized Fe-K Emission and Absorption Components in Centaurus A
Taishu Kayanoki, Yasushi Fukazawa, Junjie Mao, Jon M. Miller, Luigi Gallo, Tahir Yaqoob, Richard Mushotzky, David Bogensberger, Misaki Mizumoto, Kouichi Hagino, Hirofumi Noda, Yoshihiro Ueda, Makoto Tashiro, Yuya Nakatani, Toshiya Iwata, Misaki Urata

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of multiple ionized Fe-K emission and absorption components in Centaurus A using XRISM, revealing complex circumnuclear environments and outflows in a low-luminosity radio galaxy.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution spectral observations of ionized Fe-K features, establishing a benchmark for studying AGN environments with XRISM.
Findings
Detection of multiple ionized Fe XXV and Fe XXVI emission components.
Identification of blueshifted absorption lines indicating high-velocity outflows.
Characterization of emission components' origins near the black hole and torus.
Abstract
We present the first clear detection of ionized Fe-K emission and absorption components in the nearby radio galaxy Centaurus A, revealed by the high-resolution XRISM/Resolve detector. In the 6.5-6.9 keV band, XRISM reveals multiple Fe XXV and Fe XXVI emission components. One is a broad (with a width of sigma = 3000 km/s) and redshifted (+3400 km/s) component, originating at D = 0.02 pc from the central black hole. The other two components are narrow (with a width of sigma = 500 km/s) and exhibit redshifted and blueshifted velocities (+2600 km/s and -1500 km/s), originating from more distant regions (D = 0.1 pc). The photo-ionized model explains the broader component, while the two narrower components can be explained by either photo-ionization or collisional ionization. One interpretation is that the broader component is an outflow at ~10^2 R_S (R_S; Schwarzschild radius) and the narrow…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
