On the origin of the X-ray emission from a narrow-line radio quasar at z ; 1
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Barcons Jaúregui, Francesc Xavier




Fecha
2003Derechos
This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2003 RAS, MNRAS Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Publicado en
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 343, 1, 137-142
Editorial
Oxford University Press
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Palabras clave
Galaxies: active
X-rays: galaxies
Resumen/Abstract
We present new XMM?Newton X-ray observations of the z = 1.246 narrow-line radio quasar RX J1011.2+5545 serendipitously discovered by ROSAT. The flat X-ray spectrum previously measured by ROSAT and ASCA is shown to be the result of a steep ? 1.8 power-law spectrum seen through a moderate intrinsic absorbing column (N H ? 4 × 1021 cm?2). The position of the X-ray source is entirely coincident with the nucleus of the radio source that we have resolved in new sensitive VLA observations at 3.6 and 6 cm, implying that scattering in the radio lobes is not responsible for the bulk of X-ray emission. In the EPIC pn image, a faint patch of X-ray emission is apparent 14 arcsec to the north-east of the main X-ray source. The former is positionally coincident with an apparently extended optical object with R ? 21.9, but there is no associated radio emission, thus ruling out the possibility that this represents a hotspot in a jet emanating from the primary X-ray source. No reflection features are detected in the X-ray spectrum of the narrow-line radio quasar, although an Fe line with an equivalent width of up to 600 eV cannot be ruled out.
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