X-raying the Ultraluminous Infrared Starburst Galaxy and Broad Absorption Line QSO, Markarian 231
S. C. Gallagher, W. N. Brandt, G. C. Chartas, G. P. Garmire, (Penn State), & R. M. Sambruna (George Mason University)
Abstract
As a well-studied ultraluminous infrared galaxy,
Markarian 231 is perhaps the prototypical starburst/QSO composite
galaxy where both phenomena contribute significantly to the high
bolometric luminosity.
X-ray studies of ultraluminous infrared galaxies provide essential
information about the end-products of stellar evolution as well as the
immediate environment of an active nucleus.
As an X-ray target, Mrk 231 is of additional interest as a Broad
Absorption Line (BAL) QSO; members of this class are
notoriously weak X-ray sources with few X-ray spectra in the
literature. With 40 ks of Chandra ACIS-S exposure, new
information on both the starburst and QSO components of the X-ray
emission has been obtained. Most notably, significant nuclear variability at
energies above 2 keV indicates that Chandra has probed within
light hours of the central black hole. The bulk of the X-ray luminosity is
emitted from an unresolved nuclear point source, and the spectrum is
remarkably hard with the majority of the flux emitted above 2 keV.
The best-fitting model indicates that the spectrum contains a strong
reflection component as well as a scattered power-law continuum
absorbed at low energies. In addition, soft, thermal emission
from the galaxy disk encompasses the optical extent of the galaxy and
exhibits resolved structure. An off-nuclear point source with
0.35-8.0 keV luminosity,
erg s-1,
consistent with the ultraluminous X-ray sources in other nearby
starbursts, is also detected.
CATEGORY: ACTIVE GALAXIES AND QUASARS