Variable partial covering and a relativistic iron line in NGC 1365

Abstract

We present a complete analysis of the hard X-ray (2-10 keV) properties of the Seyfert galaxy NGC 1365, based on a 60 ks XMM-Newton observation performed in January 2004. The two main results are: 1) We detect an obscuring cloud with NH~3.5x1023 cm(-2) crossing the line of sight in ~25 ks. This implies a dimension of the X-ray source not larger than a few 1013 cm and a distance of the obscuring cloud of the order of 1016 cm. Adopting the black hole mass M(BH) estimated from the M(BH)-velocity dispersion relation, the source size is DS<20 RG and the distance and density of the obscuring clouds are R~3000-10000 RG and n~10(10) cm(-3), i.e. typical values for broad line region clouds. 2) An iron emission line with a relativistic profile is detected with high statistical significance. A time integrated fit of the line+continuum reflection components suggests a high iron abundance (~3 times solar) and an origin of these components in the inner part (~10 RG) of the accretion disk, in agreement with the small source size inferred from the analysis of the absorption variability.

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