Robotic Reverberation Mapping of Arp 151

Abstract

We present the first results from the Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope (LCOGT) Network's Active Galactic Nuclei Key Project, a large program devoted to using the robotic resources of LCOGT to perform time domain studies of active galaxies. We monitored the Seyfert 1 galaxy Arp~151 (Mrk~40) for 200 days with robotic imagers and with the FLOYDS robotic spectrograph at Faulkes Telescope North. Arp~151 was highly variable during this campaign, with V-band light curve variations of 0.3 mag and Hβ flux changing by a factor of 3. We measure robust time lags between the V-band continuum and the Hα, Hβ and Hγ emission lines, with τcen = 13.89+1.39-1.41, 7.52+1.43-1.06 and 7.40+1.50-1.32 days, respectively. The lag for the He2 λ4686 emission line is unresolved. We measure a velocity-resolved lag for the Hβ line, which is clearly asymmetric with higher lags on the blue wing of the line which decline to the red, possibly indicative of radial inflow, and is similar in morphology to past observations of the Hβ transfer function shape. Assuming a virialization factor of f=5.5, we estimate a black hole mass of MBH=6.2+1.4-1.2×106~M, also consistent with past measurements for this object. These results represent the first step to demonstrate the powerful robotic capabilities of LCOGT for long-term, AGN time domain campaigns that human intensive programs cannot easily accomplish. Arp 151 is now one of just a few AGN where the virial product is known to remain constant against substantial changes in Hβ lag and luminosity.

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