Variability and the Size-Luminosity Relation of the Intermediate-mass AGN in NGC 4395
Abstract
We present a variability study of the lowest-luminosity Seyfert 1 nucleus of the galaxy NGC 4395 based on photometric monitoring campaigns in 2017 and 2018. Using 22 ground-based and space telescopes, we monitored NGC 4395 with a ∼5-minute cadence during a period of 10 days and obtained light curves in the ultraviolet (UV), V, J, H, and K/Ks bands, as well as narrowband Hα. The rms variability is ∼0.13 mag in the Swift UVM2 and V filter light curves, decreasing down to ∼0.01 mag in the K filter. After correcting for the continuum contribution to the Hα narrow band, we measured the time lag of the Hα emission line with respect to the V-band continuum as 55-31+27 - 122-67+33 minutes in 2017 and 49-14+15 - 83-14+13 minutes in 2018, depending on assumptions about the continuum variability amplitude in the Hα narrow band. We obtained no reliable measurements for the continuum-to-continuum lag between UV and V bands and among near-IR bands, owing to the large flux uncertainty of UV observations and the limited time baseline. We determined the active galactic nucleus (AGN) monochromatic luminosity at 5100 Å, λ{Lλ}=(5.75± 0.40)× 1039 erg s-1, after subtracting the contribution of the nuclear star cluster. While the optical luminosity of NGC 4395 is two orders of magnitude lower than that of other reverberation-mapped AGNs, NGC 4395 follows the size-luminosity relation, albeit with an offset of 0.48 dex (≥2.5σ) from the previous best-fit relation of Bentz et al.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- April 2020
- DOI:
- 10.3847/1538-4357/ab7a98
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2002.08028
- Bibcode:
- 2020ApJ...892...93C
- Keywords:
-
- Reverberation mapping;
- Active galactic nuclei;
- Active galaxies;
- Galaxy nuclei;
- Low-luminosity active galactic nuclei;
- Intermediate-mass black holes;
- Seyfert galaxies;
- 2019;
- 16;
- 17;
- 609;
- 2033;
- 816;
- 1447;
- Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies
- E-Print:
- Accepted for publication in ApJ (Feb. 23rd, 2020). 18 pages, 10 figures