We present the first results from a detailed spectral-timing analysis of a long (~130 ks) XMM- Newton observation and quasi-simultaneous NuSTAR and Swift observations of the highly accreting narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 1044. The broad-band (0.3-50 keV) spectrum reveals the presence of a strong soft X-ray excess emission below ~1.5 keV, iron Kα emission complex at ~6-7 keV and a 'Compton hump' at ~15-30 keV. We find that the relativistic reflection from a high-density accretion disc with a broken power-law emissivity profile can simultaneously explain the soft X-ray excess, highly ionized broad iron line and the Compton hump. At low frequencies ([2 - 6] × 10-5 Hz), the power-law continuum-dominated 1.5- 5 keV band lags behind the reflection-dominated 0.3-1 keV band, which is explained with a combination of propagation fluctuation and Comptonization processes, while at higher frequencies ([1 - 2] × 10-4 Hz), we detect a soft lag which is interpreted as a signature of X-ray reverberation from the accretion disc. The fractional root-mean-squared variability of the source decreases with energy and is well described by two variable components: a less variable relativistic disc reflection and a more variable direct coronal emission. Our combined spectral-timing analyses suggest that the observed broad-band X-ray variability of Mrk 1044 is mainly driven by variations in the location or geometry of the optically thin, hot corona.
CITATION STYLE
Mallick, L., Alston, W. N., Parker, M. L., Fabian, A. C., Pinto, C., Dewangan, G. C., … Misra, R. (2018). A high-density relativistic reflection origin for the soft and hard X-ray excess emission from Mrk 1044. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 479(1), 615–634. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty1487
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