X-Ray Spectroscopy of Five BL Lacertae Objects
Abstract
Five X-ray bright BL Lacertae objects were observed in the energy range 0.6-4.5 keV with the solid state spectrometer (SSS) of the Einstein Observatory. The 14 SSS spectra obtained represent most of the X-ray spectra of BL Lac objects with resolution better than approximately 3. These data do not reveal the presence of large amounts of thermal gas, with upper limits for the equivalent width of individual spectral features typically less that about 100 eV. However, the SSS spectra are the first set of X-ray data to indicate low-energy absorption in excess of that caused by the cold interstellar matter in the Galaxy. Comparison with contemporaneous, lower energy X-ray data implies that this absorption does not arise in cold neutral material, but in hotter, highly ionized material, probably intrinsic to the source. All five BL Lac objects have X-ray continua that are well fitted by power-law models, with power-law energy indices usually greater than about 1. In a few cases, a flattening at higher energies is observed; these and other data suggest that two-component X-ray spectra, steep at low energies and flat at high energies, are a common feature of BL Lac objects. Three of the five sources clearly vary between SSS observations, with time scales ranging from days to years. A historical synopsis of the X-ray spectral data confirms the tendency for BL Lacertae objects to be highly variable in the X-ray band but reveals no correlation between spectral and intensity changes.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- June 1986
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1986ApJ...305..369U
- Keywords:
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- Bl Lacertae Objects;
- X Ray Astronomy;
- X Ray Spectroscopy;
- Absorption Spectra;
- Continuous Spectra;
- Emission Spectra;
- X Ray Spectra;
- Astronomy;
- BL LACERTAE OBJECTS;
- RADIATION MECHANISMS;
- X-RAYS: SPECTRA