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Dive into the research topics where G. Ponti is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Ponti.


Nature | 2009

Broad line emission from iron K- and L-shell transitions in the active galaxy 1H 0707-495

A. C. Fabian; A. Zoghbi; R. R. Ross; P. Uttley; Luigi C. Gallo; W. N. Brandt; A. J. Blustin; Th. Boller; M. D. Caballero-Garcia; Josefin Larsson; Jon M. Miller; G. Miniutti; G. Ponti; R. C. Reis; Christopher S. Reynolds; Yasuo Tanaka; Andrew J Young

Since the 1995 discovery of the broad iron K-line emission from the Seyfert galaxy MCG–6-30-15 (ref. 1), broad iron K lines have been found in emission from several other Seyfert galaxies, from accreting stellar-mass black holes and even from accreting neutron stars. The iron K line is prominent in the reflection spectrum created by the hard-X-ray continuum irradiating dense accreting matter. Relativistic distortion of the line makes it sensitive to the strong gravity and spin of the black hole. The accompanying iron L-line emission should be detectable when the iron abundance is high. Here we report the presence of both iron K and iron L emission in the spectrum of the narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy 1H 0707-495. The bright iron L emission has enabled us to detect a reverberation lag of about 30 s between the direct X-ray continuum and its reflection from matter falling into the black hole. The observed reverberation timescale is comparable to the light-crossing time of the innermost radii around a supermassive black hole. The combination of spectral and timing data on 1H 0707-495 provides strong evidence that we are witnessing emission from matter within a gravitational radius, or a fraction of a light minute, from the event horizon of a rapidly spinning, massive black hole.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Ubiquitous equatorial accretion disc winds in black hole soft states

G. Ponti; R. P. Fender; Mitchell C. Begelman; R. J. H. Dunn; Joseph Neilsen; M. Coriat

High-resolution spectra of Galactic black holes (GBHs) reveal the presence of highly ionized absorbers. In one GBH, accreting close to the Eddington limit for more than a decade, a powerful accretion disc wind is observed to be present in softer X-ray states and it has been suggested that it can carry away enough mass and energy to quench the radio jet. Here we report that these winds, which may have mass outflow rates of the order of the inner accretion rate or higher, are a ubiquitous component of the jet-free soft states of all GBHs. We furthermore demonstrate that these winds have an equatorial geometry with opening angles of few tens of degrees, and so are only observed in sources in which the disc is inclined at a large angle to the line of sight. The decrease in Fe xxv/Fe xxvi line ratio with Compton temperature, observed in the soft state, suggests a link between higher wind ionization and harder spectral shapes. Although the physical interaction between the wind, accretion flow and jet is still not fully understood, the mass flux and power of these winds and their presence ubiquitously during the soft X-ray states suggest they are fundamental components of the accretion phenomenon


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Discovery of a relation between black hole mass and soft X-ray time lags in active galactic nuclei

B. De Marco; G. Ponti; M. Cappi; M. Dadina; P. Uttley; Edward M. Cackett; A. C. Fabian; G. Miniutti

We carried out a systematic analysis of time lags between X-ray energy bands in a large sample (32 sources) of unabsorbed, radio quiet active galactic nuclei (AGN), observed by XMM-Newton. The analysis of X-ray lags (up to the highest/shortest frequencies/time-scales), is performed in the Fourier-frequency domain, between energy bands where the soft excess (soft band) and the primary power law (hard band) dominate the emission. We report a total of 15 out of 32 sources displaying a high-frequency soft lag in their light curves. All 15 are at a significance level exceeding 97 per cent and 11 are at a level exceeding 99 per cent. Of these soft lags, seven have not been previously reported in the literature, thus this work significantly increases the number of known sources with a soft/negative lag. The characteristic time-scales of the soft/negative lag are relatively short (with typical frequencies and amplitudes of ν ∼ 0.07-4 × 10−3 Hz and τ ∼ 10-600 s, respectively), and show a highly significant (≳4σ) correlation with the black hole mass. The measured correlations indicate that soft lags are systematically shifted to lower frequencies and higher absolute amplitudes as the mass of the source increases. To first approximation, all the sources in the sample are consistent with having similar mass-scaled lag properties. These results strongly suggest the existence of a mass-scaling law for the soft/negative lag, that holds for AGN spanning a large range of masses (about 2.5 orders of magnitude), thus supporting the idea that soft lags originate in the innermost regions of AGN and are powerful tools for testing their physics and geometry.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

CAIXA: a catalogue of AGN in the XMM-Newton archive - I. Spectral analysis

Stefano Bianchi; Matteo Guainazzi; Giorgio Matt; N. Fonseca Bonilla; G. Ponti

Aims. We present CAIXA, a Catalogue of AGN In the XMM-Newton Archive. It consists of all the radio-quiet X-ray unobscured (N H < 2 × 10 22 cm -2 ) active galactic nuclei (AGN) observed by XMM-Newton in targeted observations, whose data are public as of March 2007. With its 156 sources, this is the largest catalogue of high signal-to-noise X-ray spectra of AGN. Methods. All the EPIC pn spectra of the sources in CAIXA were extracted homogeneously, and a baseline model was applied in order to derive their basic X-ray properties. These data are complemented by multiwavelength data found in the literature: black hole masses, full width half maximum (FWHM) of Hβ, radio and optical fluxes. Results. Here we describe our homogeneous spectral analysis of the X-ray data in CAIXA and present all the results on the parameters adopted in our best-fit models.


Science | 2014

A fast and long-lived outflow from the supermassive black hole in NGC 5548

Jelle S. Kaastra; Gerard A. Kriss; M. Cappi; M. Mehdipour; P. O. Petrucci; K. C. Steenbrugge; Nahum Arav; Ehud Behar; Stefano Bianchi; R. Boissay; Graziella Branduardi-Raymont; C. Chamberlain; E. Costantini; J. C. Ely; J. Ebrero; L. Di Gesu; Fiona A. Harrison; Shai Kaspi; J. Malzac; B. De Marco; Giorgio Matt; K. Nandra; S. Paltani; R. Person; B. M. Peterson; Ciro Pinto; G. Ponti; F. Pozo Nuñez; A. De Rosa; H. Seta

Gas jets block extragalactic x-rays Supermassive black holes at the heart of active galaxies produce powerful gas outflows. NGC 5548 is one such source known to sustain a persistent outflow of ionized gas. However, its associated x-ray and ultraviolet (UV) emission seem to have been suppressed in recent years. Kaastra et al. conducted a multiwavelength monitoring campaign throughout 2013 to characterize the systems behavior. They suggest that an additional faster jet component has been launching clumps of gas that obscure both the x-ray and UV radiation. The timing of this phenomenon indicates a source only a few light-days away from the nucleus. This proximity suggests that the outflow could be associated with a wind from the supermassive black holes accretion disk. Even more powerful outflows could also influence their host galaxies, and this finding demonstrates how that feedback might work. Science, this issue p. 64 Prolonged suppression of high-energy emission from an active galactic nucleus is attributed to fast expulsion of ionized gas. Supermassive black holes in the nuclei of active galaxies expel large amounts of matter through powerful winds of ionized gas. The archetypal active galaxy NGC 5548 has been studied for decades, and high-resolution x-ray and ultraviolet (UV) observations have previously shown a persistent ionized outflow. An observing campaign in 2013 with six space observatories shows the nucleus to be obscured by a long-lasting, clumpy stream of ionized gas not seen before. It blocks 90% of the soft x-ray emission and causes simultaneous deep, broad UV absorption troughs. The outflow velocities of this gas are up to five times faster than those in the persistent outflow, and, at a distance of only a few light days from the nucleus, it may likely originate from the accretion disk.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

Multiwavelength campaign on Mrk 509 IV. Optical-UV-X-ray variability and the nature of the soft X-ray excess

Missagh Mehdipour; Graziella Branduardi-Raymont; J. S. Kaastra; Pierre-Olivier Petrucci; Gerard A. Kriss; G. Ponti; Alexander J. Blustin; Stephane Paltani; M. Cappi; R. G. Detmers; Katrien C. Steenbrugge

We present the analysis of XMM-Newton and Swift optical-UV and X-ray observations of the Seyfert-1/QSO Mrk 509, part of an unprecedented multi-wavelength campaign, investigating the nuclear environment of this AGN. The XMM-Newton data are from a series of 10 observations of about 60 ks each, spaced from each other by about 4 days, taken in Oct.-Nov. 2009. During our campaign, Mrk 509 was also observed with Swift for a period of about 100 days, monitoring the behaviour of the source before and after the XMM-Newton observations. With these data we have established the continuum spectrum in the optical-UV and X-ray bands and investigated its variability on the timescale of our campaign with a resolution time of a few days. In order to measure and model the continuum as far as possible into the UV, we also made use of Hubble Space Telescope (HST) cosmic origin spectrograph (COS) observations of Mrk 509 (part of our coordinated campaign) and of an archival Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) observation. We have found that in addition to an X-ray power-law, the spectrum displays soft X-ray excess emission below 2 keV, which interestingly varies in association with the thermal optical-UV emission from the accretion disc. The change in the X-ray power-law component flux (albeit smaller than that of the soft excess), on the other hand, is uncorrelated to the flux variability of the soft X-ray excess and the disc component on the probed timescale. The results of our simultaneous broad-band spectral and timing analysis suggest that, on a resolution time of a few days, the soft X-ray excess of Mrk 509 is produced by the Comptonisation of the thermal optical-UV photons from the accretion disc by a warm (0.2 keV) optically thick (tau similar to 17) corona surrounding the inner regions of the disc. This makes Mrk 509, with a black hole mass of about 1-3 x 10(8) M-circle dot, the highest mass known system to display such behaviour and origin for the soft X-ray excess.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

Long XMM observation of the narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy IRAS 13224−3809: rapid variability, high spin and a soft lag

A. C. Fabian; E. Kara; D. J. Walton; D. R. Wilkins; R. R. Ross; K. Lozanov; P. Uttley; L. Gallo; A. Zoghbi; G. Miniutti; Th. Boller; W. N. Brandt; E. M. Cackett; Chia Ying Chiang; T. Dwelly; J. Malzac; J. M. Miller; E. Nardini; G. Ponti; R. C. Reis; Christopher S. Reynolds; James F. Steiner; Yasuo Tanaka; Andrew J Young

The narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy IRAS 13224−3809 has been observed with XMM-Newton for 500 ks. The source is rapidly variable on time-scales down to a few 100 s. The spectrum shows strong broad Fe − K and L emission features which are interpreted as arising from reflection from the inner parts of an accretion disc around a rapidly spinning black hole. Assuming a power law emissivity for the reflected flux and that the innermost radius corresponds to the innermost stable circular orbit, the black hole spin is measured to be 0.989 with a statistical precision better than 1 per cent. Systematic uncertainties are discussed. A soft X-ray lag of 100 s confirms this scenario. The bulk of the power-law continuum source is located at a radius of 2-3 gravitational radii.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

A Strongly Magnetized Pulsar within the Grasp of the Milky Way's Supermassive Black Hole

N. Rea; P. Esposito; José A. Pons; Roberto Turolla; D. F. Torres; G. L. Israel; Andrea Possenti; M. Burgay; Daniele Viganò; A. Papitto; Rosalba Perna; L. Stella; G. Ponti; F. K. Baganoff; Daryl Haggard; Ascension Camero-Arranz; S. Zane; Anthony Howard Minter; S. Mereghetti; A. Tiengo; R. Schödel; M. Feroci; R. P. Mignani; Diego Gotz

We acknowledge support by grants AYA 2012-39303, SGR2009-811, iLINK 2011-0303, AYA 2010-21097-C03-02, Prometeo 2009/103, AYA2010-17631, P08-TIC-4075, INAF 2010 PRIN grant, Chandra Awards GO2-13076X, G03-14060X, GO3-14099X and G03-14121X, and an EU Marie Curie IEF (FP7-PEOPLE-2012-IEF-331095).


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2009

The XMM–Newton view of AGN with intermediate-mass black holes

G. Miniutti; G. Ponti; Jenny E. Greene; Luis C. Ho; A. C. Fabian; Kazushi Iwasawa

We have observed with XMM-Newton four radiatively efficient active type 1 galaxies with black hole masses < 10 6 M ⊙ , selected optically from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and previously detected in the ROSAT All Sky Survey. Their X-ray spectra closely resemble those of more luminous Seyferts and quasars, powered by accretion on to much more massive black holes and none of the objects is intrinsically absorbed by cold matter totally covering the source. We show here that their soft X-ray spectrum exhibits a soft excess with the same characteristics as that observed ubiquitously in radio-quiet Seyfert 1 galaxies and type 1 quasars, both in terms of temperatures and strength. This is highly surprising because the small black hole mass of these objects should lead to a thermal disc contribution in the soft X-rays and not in the ultraviolet (as for more massive objects) with thus a much more prominent soft X-ray excess. Moreover, even when the soft X-ray excess is modelled with a pure thermal disc, its luminosity turns out to be much lower than that expected from accretion theory for the given temperature. While alternative scenarios for the nature of the soft excess (namely smeared ionized absorption and disc reflection) cannot be distinguished on a pure statistical basis, we point out that the absorption model produces a strong correlation between absorbing column density and ionization state, which may be difficult to interpret and is most likely spurious. Moreover, as pointed out before by others, absorption must occur in a fairly relativistic wind which is problematic, especially because of the enormous implied mass outflow rate. As for reflection, it does only invoke standard ingredients of any accretion model for radiatively efficient sources such as a hard X-rays source and a relatively cold (though partially ionized) accretion disc, and therefore seems the natural choice to explain the soft excess in most (if not all) cases. The reflection model is also consistent with the additional presence of a thermal disc component with the theoretically expected temperature (although, again, with smaller-than-expected total luminosity). We also studied in some detail the X-ray variability properties of the four objects. The observed active galaxies are among the most variable in X-rays and their excess variance is among the largest. This is in line with their relatively small black hole mass and with expectations from simple power spectra models.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

Multiwavelength campaign on Mrk 509 - XII. Broad band spectral analysis

P. O. Petrucci; S. Paltani; J. Malzac; J. S. Kaastra; M. Cappi; G. Ponti; B. De Marco; Gerard A. Kriss; K. C. Steenbrugge; S. Bianchi; G. Branduardi-Raymont; M. Mehdipour; E. Costantini; M. Dadina; Piotr Lubinski

The origin of the different spectral components present in the high-energy (UV to X-rays/gamma-rays) spectra of Seyfert galaxies is still being debated a lot. One of the major limitations, in this respect, is the lack of really simultaneous broad-band observations that allow us to disentangle the behavior of each component and to better constrain their interconnections. The simultaneous UV to X-rays/gamma rays data obtained during the multiwavelength campaign on the bright Seyfert 1 Mrk 509 are used in this paper and tested against physically motivated broad band models. Mrk 509 was observed by XMM-Newton and INTEGRAL in October/November 2009, with one observation every four days for a total of ten observations. Each observation has been fitted with a realistic thermal Comptonization model for the continuum emission. Prompted by the correlation between the UV and soft X-ray flux, we used a thermal Comptonization component for the soft X-ray excess. We also included a warm absorber and a reflection component, as required by the precise studies previously done by our consortium. The UV to X-ray/gamma-ray emission of Mrk 509 can be well fitted by these components. The presence of a relatively hard high-energy spectrum points to the existence of a hot (kT ∼ 100 keV), optically-thin (τ ∼ 0.5) corona producing the primary continuum. In contrast, the soft X-ray component requires a warm (kT ∼ 1 keV), optically-thick (τ ∼ 10−20) plasma. Estimates of the amplification ratio for this warm plasma support a configuration relatively close to the “theoretical” configuration of a slab corona above a passive disk. An interesting consequence is the weak luminosity-dependence of its emission, which is a possible explanation of the roughly constant spectral shape of the soft X-ray excess seen in AGNs. The temperature (∼ 3e V) and fl ux of the soft-photon field entering and cooling the warm plasma suggests that it covers the accretion disk down to a transition radius Rin of 10−20 Rg. This plasma could be the warm upper layer of the accretion disk. In contrast, the hot corona has a more photon-starved geometry. The high temperature (∼100 eV) of the soft-photon field entering and cooling it favors a localization of the hot corona in the inner flow. This soft-photon field could be part of the comptonized emission produced by the warm plasma. In this framework, the change in the geometry (i.e. Rin) could explain most of the observed flux and spectral variability.

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P. O. Petrucci

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Gerard A. Kriss

Space Telescope Science Institute

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M. Mehdipour

University College London

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S. Bianchi

Sapienza University of Rome

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B. De Marco

Polish Academy of Sciences

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