The remarkable X-ray variability of IRAS 13224-3809 - I. The variability process

Young, A. J.; Fabian, A. C.; Reynolds, C. S.; Pinto, C.; Miniutti, G.; Uttley, P.; De Marco, B.; Buisson, D. J. K.; Cackett, E. M.; Gallo, L. C.; Kara, E.; Alston, W. N.; Wilkins, D. R.; Parker, M. L.; Walton, D. J.; Lohfink, A. M.; Middleton, M. J.; Jiang, J.; Zogbhi, A.; Dovciak, M.

United Kingdom, United States, Spain, Netherlands, Poland, Canada, Czech Republic

Abstract

We present a detailed X-ray timing analysis of the highly variable narrow-line Seyfert 1 (NLS1) galaxy IRAS 13224-3809. The source was recently monitored for 1.5 Ms with XMM-Newton, which, combined with 500 ks archival data, makes this the best-studied NLS1 galaxy in X-rays to date. We apply standard time- and Fourier-domain techniques in order to understand the underlying variability process. The source flux is not distributed lognormally, as expected for all types of accreting sources. The first non-linear rms-flux relation for any accreting source in any waveband is found, with rms ∝ flux2/3. The light curves exhibit significant strong non-stationarity, in addition to that caused by the rms-flux relation, and are fractionally more variable at lower source flux. The power spectrum is estimated down to ∼10-7 Hz and consists of multiple peaked components: a low-frequency break at ∼10-5 Hz, with slope α < 1 down to low frequencies, and an additional component breaking at ∼10-3 Hz. Using the high-frequency break, we estimate the black hole mass {M_{BH}}= [0.5{-}2] × 106 M_{⊙} and mass accretion rate in Eddington units, \dot{m}_Edd ≳ 1. The broad-band power spectral density (PSD) and accretion rate make IRAS 13224-3809 a likely analogue of very high/intermediate-state black hole X-ray binaries. The non-stationarity is manifest in the PSD with the normalization of the peaked components increasing with decreasing source flux, as well as the low-frequency peak moving to higher frequencies. We also detect a narrow coherent feature in the soft-band PSD at 7 × 10-4 Hz; modelled with a Lorentzian the feature has Q ∼ 8 and an rms ∼3 per cent. We discuss the implication of these results for accretion of matter on to black holes.

2019 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
XMM-Newton 67