Bibcode
Puchnarewicz, E. M.; Mason, K. O.; Carrera, F. J.; Brandt, W. N.; Cabrera-Guera, F.; Carballo, R.; Hasinger, G.; McMahon, R. G.; Mittaz, J. P. D.; Page, M. J.; Perez-Fournon, I.; Schwope, A.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 291, Issue 1, pp. 177-202.
Advertised on:
10
1997
Citations
38
Refereed citations
35
Description
We present the optical and UV emission-line properties of 160
X-ray-selected active galactic nuclei (AGN) taken from the RIXOS survey
(including Hα, Hβ, [Oiii] lambda5007, Mgii lambda2798 and
Ciii] lambda1909). This sample is believed to contain a mixture of
absorbed and unabsorbed objects, with column densities up to
~4x10^21cm^-2. Although the distribution of the [Oiii] lambda5007 EW for
the RIXOS AGN is typical of optically selected samples, the Balmer line
EWs are relatively low. This is consistent with the presence of a dust
absorber between the broad- and narrow-line regions (e.g. a molecular
torus), and intrinsically weak optical line emission. We find Baldwin
effects in Ciii] lambda1909 and Mgii lambda2798, and a positive response
of the Mgii line to its ionizing continuum. There is a strong
correlation between the EW and FWHM of Mgii, which may be similar to
that seen in other samples for Hβ. We demonstrate that this is
consistent with models that suggest two line-emitting zones, a `very
broad-line region' (VBLR) and an `intermediate-line region' (ILR). The
correlation between EW and FWHM in Mgii may be a physical characteristic
of the ILR: e.g. the radiative acceleration of the line-emitting clouds;
or it may reflect a geometric dependence, e.g. anisotropies in the line
or continuum emission, or a smaller covering factor of the ILR at large
distances. We found no correlation between the Hβ FWHM and the
slope of the X-ray spectrum, despite reports of correlations in other
samples. However, this may be due to the effects of dust absorption,
which suppresses the broad Hβ component, masking any relationship.
The Hα FWHM does tend to be narrow when alpha_x is soft, and
broadens as alpha_x hardens, although the formal probability for this
correlation is low (91 per cent). If the distribution of alpha_x in the
RIXOS sample reflects the level of intrinsic absorption in these AGN,
the data suggest a possible link between the velocity of the Balmer
line-emitting region and the amount of absorbing material beyond.