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Hα Reverberation Mapping of the Intermediate-mass Active Galactic Nucleus in NGC 4395 : H alpha Reverberation Mapping of the Intermediate-mass Active Galactic Nucleus in NGC 4395

Cited 5 time in Web of Science Cited 4 time in Scopus
Authors

Cho, Hojin; Woo, Jong-Hak; Treu, Tommaso; Williams, Peter R.; Armen, Stephen F.; Barth, Aaron J.; Bennert, Vardha N.; Cho, Wanjin; Filippenko, Alexei, V; Gallo, Elena; Geum, Jaehyuk; Gonzalez-Buitrago, Diego; Gultekin, Kayhan; Hodges-Kluck, Edmund; Horst, John C.; Hwang, Seong Hyeon; Kang, Wonseok; Kim, Minjin; Kim, Taewoo; Leonard, Douglas C.; Malkan, Matthew A.; Remigio, Raymond P.; Sand, David J.; Shin, Jaejin; Son, Donghoon; Sung, Hyun-il; Vivian, U.

Issue Date
2021-11
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Citation
Astrophysical Journal, Vol.921 No.2
Abstract
We present the results of a high-cadence spectroscopic and imaging monitoring campaign of the active galactic nucleus (AGN) of NGC 4395. High signal-to-noise-ratio spectra were obtained at the Gemini-N 8 m telescope using the GMOS integral field spectrograph (IFS) on 2019 March 7 and at the Keck I 10 m telescope using the Low-Resolution Imaging Spectrometer with slit masks on 2019 March 3 and April 2. Photometric data were obtained with a number of 1 m-class telescopes during the same nights. The narrow-line region (NLR) is spatially resolved; therefore, its variable contributions to the slit spectra make the standard procedure of relative flux calibration impractical. We demonstrate that spatially resolved data from the IFS can be effectively used to correct the slit-mask spectral light curves. While we obtained no reliable lag owing to the lack of a strong variability pattern in the light curves, we constrain the broad-line time lag to be less than 3 hr, consistent with the photometric lag of similar to 80 minutes reported by Woo et al. By exploiting the high-quality spectra, we measure the second moment of the broad component of the H alpha emission line to be 586 +/- 19 km s(-1), superseding the lower value reported by Woo et al. Combining the revised line dispersion and the photometric time lag, we update the black hole mass to (1.7 +/- 0.3) x 10(4) M (circle dot).
ISSN
0004-637X
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/197696
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac1e92
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