Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://research.matf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3206| Title: | AGN STORM 2. XI. Spectroscopic Reverberation Mapping of the Hot Dust in Mrk 817 | Authors: | Landt, Hermine Boizelle, Benjamin D. Brotherton, Michael S. Ferrarese, Laura Fischer, Travis Gorjian, Varoujan Joner, Michael D. Kynoch, Daniel McLane, Jacob N. Mitchell, Jake A. J. Montano, John W. Riffel, Rogemar A. Sanmartim, David Storchi-Bergmann, Thaisa Ward, Martin J. Barth, Aaron J. Cackett, Edward M. De Rosa, Gisella Edelson, Rick Gelbord, Jonathan Homayouni, Yasaman Horne, Keith Kara, Erin A. Kriss, Gerard A. Arav, Nahum Dalla Bontà, Elena Dehghanian, Maryam Ferland, Gary J. Fian, Carina González Buitrago, Diego H. Ilić, Dragana Kaspi, Shai Kochanek, Christopher S. Kovačević, Anđelka Lewin, Collin Li, Yan-Rong Mehdipour, Missagh Netzer, Hagai Plesha, Rachel Popović, Luka Proga, Daniel Wang, Jian-Min Zaidouni, Fatima Zu, Ying |
Affiliations: | Astronomy Astronomy Astronomy |
Issue Date: | 2026 | Rank: | M21 | Publisher: | IOP Science | Journal: | The Astrophysical Journal | Abstract: | The AGN Space Telescope and Optical Reverberation Mapping (STORM) 2 campaign targeted Mrk 817 with intensive multiwavelength monitoring and found its soft X-ray emission to be strongly absorbed. We present results from 157 near-IR spectra with an average cadence of a few days. Whereas the hot dust reverberation signal as tracked by the continuum flux does not have a clear response, we recover a dust reverberation radius of ∼90 lt-days from the blackbody dust temperature light curve. This radius is consistent with previous photometric reverberation mapping results when Mrk 817 was in an unobscured state. The heating/cooling process we observe indicates that the inner limit of the dusty torus is set by a process other than sublimation, rendering it a luminosity-invariant “dusty wall” of a carbonaceous composition. Assuming thermal equilibrium for dust optically thick to the incident radiation, we derive a luminosity of ∼6 × 1044 erg s−1 for the source heating it. This luminosity is similar to that of the obscured spectral energy distribution, assuming a disk with an Eddington accretion rate of . Alternatively, the dust is illuminated by an unobscured lower luminosity disk with , which permits the UV–optical continuum lags in the high-obscuration state to be dominated by diffuse emission from the broad-line region. Finally, we find hot dust extended on scales ≳ 140–350 pc, associated with the rotating disk of ionised gas we observe in spatially resolved [S III] λ9531 images. Its likely origin is in the compact bulge of the barred spiral host galaxy, where it is heated by a nuclear starburst. |
URI: | https://research.matf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3206 | ISSN: | 0004-637X | DOI: | 10.3847/1538-4357/ae17cd |
| Appears in Collections: | Research outputs |
Show full item record
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.