The closest look at 1H 0707-495: X-ray reverberation lags with 1.3 Ms of data

E. Kara, A.C. Fabian, E.M. Cackett, J. Steiner, P. Uttley, D.R. Wilkins and A. Zoghbi, 2012, MNRAS 428, 2795-2804

Reverberation lags in AGN were first discovered in the NLS1 galaxy, 1H0707-495. We present a follow-up analysis using 1.3 Ms of data, which allows for the closest ever look at the reverberation signature of this remarkable source. We confirm previous findings of a hard lag of ~100 seconds at frequencies v ~ [0.5 - 4] e-4 Hz, and a soft lag of ~30 seconds at higher frequencies, v ~ [0.6 - 3] e-3 Hz. These two frequency domains clearly show different energy dependences in their lag spectra. We also find evidence for a signature from the broad Fe K line in the high frequency lag spectrum. We use Monte Carlo simulations to show how the lag and coherence measurements respond to the addition of Poisson noise and to dilution by other components. With our better understanding of these effects on the lag, we show that the lag-energy spectra can be modelled with a scenario in which low frequency hard lags are produced by a compact corona responding to accretion rate fluctuations propagating through an optically thick accretion disc, and the high frequency soft lags are produced by short light-travel delay associated with reflection of coronal power-law photons off the disc.

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The origin of the lag spectra observed in AGN: Reverberation and the propagation of X-ray source fluctuations

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Long XMM observation of the narrow line Seyfert 1 galaxy IRAS 13224-3809: Rapid variability, high spin and a soft lag