X-Ray and Optical Monitoring of a Gamma-Ray-Emitting Radio Galaxy, NGC 1275
Abstract
We performed monitoring observations of a gamma-ray-emitting radio galaxy, NGC 1275, in the X-ray and optical bands with the Suzaku/XIS, Kanata telescope, and the Okayama telescope. The X-ray flux of the nucleus was estimated by imaging spectroscopy in the hard X-ray band. In the optical band, a continuum flux, a broad Hα line flux, and the polarization degree were measured. We could not find any time variability of the X-ray (2006-2011) and optical continuum (2010-2011) within 30%, regardless of the recent radio and gamma-ray variability by a factor of 3. The observed optical polarization was very small at ∼0.4% and showed little variability; it would be mostly of interstellar origin within our Galaxy. Furthermore, we confirmed with the XMM-Newton data that the X-ray spectrum of NGC 1275 in 2006 exhibited the Fe-K line, whose equivalent width was typical for other radio and Seyfert galaxies. These results indicate that the jet emission is not a major component in the optical and X-ray bands. Following these results, we discuss the jet emission of NGC 1275.
- Publication:
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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan
- Pub Date:
- April 2013
- DOI:
- 10.1093/pasj/65.2.30
- Bibcode:
- 2013PASJ...65...30Y
- Keywords:
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- instrumentation: detectors;
- methods: data analysis;
- X-rays: general