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Reverberation Mapping of the Broad-line Region in NGC 5548: Evidence for Radiation Pressure?

arXiv:1607.08060 · doi:10.3847/0004-637X/827/2/118

Abstract

NGC 5548 is the best-observed reverberation-mapped active galactic nucleus with long-term, intensive monitoring. Here we report results from a new observational campaign between January and July, 2015. We measure the centroid time lag of the broad H$β$ emission line with respect to the 5100 à continuum and obtain $τ_{\rm cent} = 7.20^{+1.33}_{-0.35}$ days in the rest frame. This yields a black hole mass of $M_{\bullet}=8.71^{+3.21}_{-2.61} $x$ 10^{7}M_{\odot}$ using a broad H$β$ line dispersion of $3124\pm302$ km s$^{-1}$ and a virial factor of $f_{_{\rm BLR}}=6.3\pm1.5$ for the broad-line region (BLR), consistent with the mass measurements from previous H$β$ campaigns. The high-quality data allow us to construct a velocity-binned delay map for the broad H$β$ line, which shows a symmetric response pattern around the line center, a plausible kinematic signature of virialized motion of the BLR. Combining all the available measurements of H$β$ time lags and the associated mean 5100 à luminosities over 18 campaigns between 1989 and 2015, we find that the H$β$ BLR size varies with the mean optical luminosity, but, interestingly, with a possible delay of $2.35_{-1.25}^{+3.47}$ yrs. This delay coincides with the typical BLR dynamical timescale of NGC 5548, indicating that the BLR undergoes dynamical changes, possibly driven by radiation pressure.

24 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables; accepted for publication in ApJ; accepted 2016 May 9