5,373 citations, 1,094 as first author, h-index 42, as of November 2025
1H 0707-495 in 2011: An X-ray source within a gravitational radius of the event horizon
A.C. Fabian, A. Zoghbi, D. Wilkins, T. Dwelly, P. Uttley, N. Schartel, G.Miniutti, L. Gallo, D. Grupe, S. Komossa, M. Santos-Lleo, 2011, MNRAS 419, 116-123
A.C. Fabian, A. Zoghbi, D. Wilkins, T. Dwelly, P. Uttley, N. Schartel, G.Miniutti, L. Gallo, D. Grupe, S. Komossa, M. Santos-Lleo, 2011, MNRAS 419, 116-123
The Narrow Line Seyfert 1 Galaxy 1H 0707-495 went in to a low state from 2010 December to 2011 February, discovered by a monitoring campaign using the X-Ray Telescope on the Swift satellite. We triggered a 100 ks XMM-Newton observation of the source in 2011 January, revealing the source to have dropped by a factor of ten in the soft band, below 1 keV, and a factor of 2 at 5 keV, compared with a long observation in 2008. The sharp spectral drop in the source usually seen around 7 keV now extends to lower energies, below 6 keV in our frame. The 2011 spectrum is well fit by a relativistically-blurred reflection spectrum similar to that which fits the 2008 data, except that the emission is now concentrated solely to the central part of the accretion disc. The irradiating source must lie within 1 gravitational radius of the event horizon of the black hole, which spins rapidly. Alternative models are briefly considered but none has any simple physical interpretation.
Determination of the X-ray reflection emissivity profile of 1H0707-495
D.R. Wilkins and A.C. Fabian, 2011, MNRAS 414, 1269-1277
D.R. Wilkins and A.C. Fabian, 2011, MNRAS 414, 1269-1277
When considering the X-ray spectrum resulting from the reflection off the surface of accretion discs of AGN, it is necessary to account for the variation in reflected flux over the disc, i.e. the emissivity profile. This will depend on factors including the location and geometry of the X-ray source and the disc characteristics. We directly obtain the emissivity profile of the disc from the observed spectrum by considering the reflection component as the sum of contributions from successive radii in the disc and fitting to find the relative weightings of these components in a relativistically-broadened emission line. This method has successfully recovered known emissivity profiles from synthetic spectra and is applied to XMM-Newton spectra of the Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy 1H 0707-495. The data imply a twice-broken power law form of the emissivity law with a steep profile in the inner regions of the disc (index 7.8) and then a flat region between 5.6rg and 34.8rg before tending to a constant index of 3.3 over the outer regions of the disc. The form of the observed emissivity profile is consistent with theoretical predictions, thus reinforcing the reflection interpretation.