论文标题
类星体的X射线和紫外线变异性之间的关系
The Relation between X-ray and Ultraviolet Variability of Quasars
论文作者
论文摘要
在许多单个来源中,已经探索了AGN中X射线与紫外线/光学变异性之间的关系,但是尚未进行大量样本研究。通过将XMM-Newton Serendipitous X射线和紫外线源目录与SDSS类星体匹配,我们构建了525个类星体的802个时期对的样本,显示了Logfx-Logfuv空间中的明显可变性。校正了光度噪声的影响后,我们发现35.6 \ pm2.1%的时代对显示显示X射线和紫外线之间的异步变异性(一个频带中的亮度,但在另一个频段中变暗)。这仅表示在28.8 \ pm4.2%的时期对中,X射线和紫外线变异性本质上是协调的。可变性同步性不依赖于类星体的物理参数或时期对的时间滞后,但更强的可变性往往具有更强的同步性。在单个来源中还可以看到同步和异步变异性之间的开关。差的协调显然与AGN变异性的X射线后处理模型和积聚率变化模型相矛盾。观察到的X射线变异幅度与紫外线范围较大范围和峰值的比率。比率的主要分数看起来太小,无法归因于X射线后处理,并且对于增值率变化而言太大。观察到的X射线和紫外线变化之间的随机关系促进了AGN中同时结合X射线和UV/光学变异性的不均匀磁盘模型。
The relation between X-ray and UV/optical variability in AGNs has been explored in many individual sources, however a large sample study is yet absent. Through matching the XMM-Newton serendipitous X-ray and UV source catalogs with SDSS quasars, we build a sample of 802 epoch-pairs of 525 quasars showing clear variability in logFx-logFuv space. After correcting for the effect of photometric noise, we find 35.6\pm2.1% of the epoch-pairs show asynchronous variability between X-ray and UV (brightening in one band but dimming in the other). This indicates only in 28.8\pm4.2% of the epoch-pairs the X-ray and UV variability are intrinsically coordinated. The variability synchronicity exhibits no dependence on physical parameters of quasars or the time lag of the epoch-pairs, except for stronger variability tends to have stronger synchronicity. Switches between synchronous and asynchronous variability are also seen in individual sources. The poor coordination clearly contradicts both the X-ray reprocessing model and the accretion rate variation model for AGN variability. The ratios of the observed X-ray variability amplitude to that in UV span a broad range and peak at ~ 2. The dominant fraction of the ratios appear too small to be attributed to X-ray reprocessing, and too large for accretion rate variation. The inhomogeneous disk model which incorporates both X-ray and UV/optical variability in AGNs is favored by the observed stochastic relation between X-ray and UV variations.