Publication:

The ROSAT spectrum of 3C 351 - A warm absorber in an X-ray-'quiet' quasar?

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Open/View Files

Date

1993

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

IOP Publishing
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Fiore, Fabrizio, Martin Elvis, Smita Mathur, Belinda J. Wilkes, and Jonathan C. McDowell. 1993. “The ROSAT Spectrum of 3C 351 - A Warm Absorber in an X-Ray-’Quiet’ Quasar?” The Astrophysical Journal 415 (September): 129. doi:10.1086/173150.

Abstract

3C 351 is one of the most X-ray-quiet radio quasars (alpha(ox) about 1.6). We have observed 3C 351 with the ROSAT position sensitive proportional counter (PSPC) and find a complex X-ray spectrum which is not well reproduced by a power law plus low-energy cut-off model. Soft excess, partial covering, and 'warm absorber' models can all produce acceptable fits, although only the warm absorber model gives typical values for the high-energy continuum slope. The alpha(ox) measured by using quasi-simultaneous ROSAT, MMT, and HST observations is in the range 1.5-1.6, significantly above the average of 1.37 for a complete sample of 33 3CR quasars. If the soft excess or partial covering models are correct, 3C 351 appears X-ray-quiet in the PSPC band because it has an extremely steep or flat intrinsic high-energy spectral slope. However, if the warm absorber model is correct, the quasar is intrinsically X-ray-quiet; the normalization of the intrinsic (unabsorbed) X-ray emission is unusually low relative to the optical luminosity. We investigate the properties of our warm absorber model in some detail. The apparently complicated behavior of the fit parameters may be understood by considering the effects of changing absorbing column and ionization parameter on intrinsic power-law-spectra of different slopes.

Description

Research Data

Keywords

Quasars, Radio Galaxies, Rosat Mission, X Ray Sources, Error Analysis, Hubble Space Telescope, Proportional Counters

Terms of Use

This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material (LAA), as set forth at Terms of Service

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Related Stories