The story of Seyfert galaxy RE J2248-511: from intriguingly ultrasoft to unremarkably average

Page, M. J.; Done, C.; Wiersema, K.; Page, K. L.; Jin, C.; Starling, R. L. C.; Romero-Colmenero, E.; Breeveld, A. A.; Lobban, A. P.; Potter, S. B.

United Kingdom, South Africa

Abstract

RE J2248-511 is one of only 14 non-blazar active galactic nuclei (AGN) detected in the far-ultraviolet (FUV) by the ROSAT Wide Field Camera implying a large ultrasoft X-ray flux. This soft X-ray excess is strongly variable on year time-scales, a common property of narrow-line Seyfert 1s, yet its optical line widths classify this source as a broad-lined Seyfert 1 (BLS1). We use four nearly simultaneous optical-X-ray spectral energy distributions (SEDs) spanning 7 yr to study the spectral shape and long-term variability of RE J2248-511. Here we show that the continuum SED for the brightest epoch data set is consistent with the mean SED of a standard quasar, and matches well to that from an XMM-Sloan Digital Sky Survey sample of AGN with <M/M> ∼ 108 and <L/LEdd> ∼ 0.2. All the correlated optical and soft X-ray variability can be due entirely to a major absorption event. The only remarkable aspect of this AGN is that there is no measurable intrinsic X-ray absorption column in the brightest epoch data set. The observed FUV flux is determined by the combination of this and the fact that the source lies within a local absorption `hole'. RE J2248-511, whose variable, ultrasoft X-ray flux once challenged its BLS1 classification, demonstrates that characterization of such objects requires multi-epoch, multiwavelength campaigns.

2014 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
XMM-Newton 4