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      Estimating the size of X-ray lamppost coronae in active galactic nuclei

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          Abstract

          We report estimates of the X-ray coronal size of active galactic nuclei in the lamppost geometry. In this commonly adopted scenario, the corona is assumed for simplicity to be a point-like X-ray source located on the axis of the accretion disc. However, the corona must intercept a number of optical/UV seed photons from the disc consistent with the observed X-ray flux, which constrains its size. We employ a relativistic ray-tracing code, originally developed by Dov\v{c}iak & Done (2016), that calculates the size of a Comptonizing lamppost corona illuminated by a standard thin disc. We assume that the disc extends down to the innermost stable circular orbit of a non-spinning or a maximally spinning black hole. We apply this method to a sample of 20 Seyfert 1 galaxies, using simultaneous optical/UV and X-ray archival data from XMM-Newton. At least for the sources accreting below the Eddington limit, we find that a Comptonizing lamppost corona can generally exist, but with constraints on its size and height above the event horizon of the black hole depending on the spin. For a maximally spinning black hole, a solution can almost always be found at any height, while for a non-spinning black hole the height must generally be higher than 5 gravitational radii. This is because, for a given luminosity, a higher spin implies more seed photons illuminating the corona due to a larger and hotter inner disc area. The maximal spin solution is favored, as it predicts an X-ray photon index in better agreement with the observations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          14 October 2020
          Article
          2010.07166
          debdc0e4-28cd-4762-b4a5-e307432cec85

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
          astro-ph.HE astro-ph.GA

          Galaxy astrophysics,High energy astrophysical phenomena
          Galaxy astrophysics, High energy astrophysical phenomena

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