Abstract
We analyze the optical, UV, and X-ray microlensing variability of the lensed quasar SDSS J0924+0219 using six epochs of Chandra data in two energy bands (spanning 0.4-8.0 keV, or 1-20 keV in the quasar rest frame), 10 epochs of F275W (rest-frame 1089 Å) Hubble Space Telescope data, and high-cadence R-band (rest-frame 2770 Å) monitoring spanning 11 years. Our joint analysis provides robust constraints on the extent of the X-ray continuum emission region and the projected area of the accretion disk. The best-fit half-light radius of the soft X-ray continuum emission region is between 5 × 10<sup>13</sup> and 10<sup>15</sup> cm, and we find an upper limit of 10<sup>15</sup> cm for the hard X-rays. The best-fit soft-band size is about 13 times smaller than the optical size, and roughly 7GM<inf>BH</inf>/c<sup>2</sup> for a 2.8 × 10<sup>8</sup> M<inf>⊙</inf> black hole, similar to the results for other systems. We find that the UV emitting region falls in between the optical and X-ray emitting regions at 10<sup>14</sup> cm < r<inf>1/2,UV</inf> < 3 × 10<sup>15</sup> cm. Finally, the optical size is significantly larger, by 1.5σ, than the theoretical thin-disk estimate based on the observed, magnification-corrected I-band flux, suggesting a shallower temperature profile than expected for a standard disk.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 258 |
Journal | Astrophysical Journal |
Volume | 806 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 20 Jun 2015 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- accretion, accretion disks
- gravitational lensing: micro
- quasars: general