Disk reflection as the origin of the X-ray polarization of NGC 4151 with IXPE
Abstract
We present an X-ray spectro-polarimetric study of the nearby type-1 active galactic nucleus NGC 4151 using two long IXPE observations obtained in 2022 and 2024, supported by simultaneous XMM-Newton and NuSTAR spectroscopy. IXPE measures a polarization degree of 6-7\% above 4 keV, with a polarization angle parallel to the radio jet, and a distinct low-energy component with a different angle, indicating at least two polarized components in the 2-8 keV band. Previous work interpreted the hard X-ray polarization as evidence for a radially extended slab-like corona. Here we test an alternative scenario in which the observed polarization is produced predominantly by relativistic reflection from an accretion disk illuminated by a compact, lamp-post-like corona. Using recently developed models, we fit the IXPE Stokes spectra with a lamp-post plus distant-torus geometry, including partial-covering absorption and an additional soft polarized power-law component. We find that the data require a low coronal height (h<9\,R g at 3σ) and a relatively large torus opening angle (>45 at 3σ), while the disk reflection contributes 20\% of the 2-8 keV flux. The soft polarized component carries only 1-5\% of the flux but has a high polarization degree (>10\%) and a polarization angle around 20. The same configuration provides acceptable fits to the 0.4-79 keV XMM-Newton and NuSTAR spectra, demonstrating that disk reprocessing by a compact corona can simultaneously account for both the polarization and broadband spectral properties of NGC 4151.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.