The origin of the vanishing soft X-ray excess in the changing-look Active Galactic Nucleus Mrk 590

Date

2022-08-08

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Abstract

We have studied the nature and origin of the soft X-ray excess detected in the interesting changing-look AGN (CLAGN) Mrk~590 using two decades of multi-wavelength observations from \xmm{}, \suzaku{}, \swift{} and \nustar{}. In the light of vanishing soft excess in this CLAGN, we test two models, "the warm Comptonization" and "the ionized disk reflection" using extensive UV/X-ray spectral analysis. Our main findings are: (1) the soft X-ray excess emission, last observed in 2004, vanished in 2011, and never reappeared in any of the later observations, (2) we detected a significant variability (∼300%) in the observed optical-UV and power-law flux between observations with the lowest state (Lbol=4.4×1043ergs−1, in 2016) and the highest state (Lbol=1.2×1044ergs−1, in 2018), (3) the UV and power-law fluxes follow same temporal pattern, (4) the photon index showed a significant variation (Γ=1.88+0.02−0.08 and Γ=1.58+0.02−0.03 in 2002 and 2021 respectively) between observations, (5) no Compton hump was detected in the source spectra but a narrow FeKα line is present in all observations, (6) we detected a high-energy cut-off in power-law continuum (92+55−25keV and 60+10−08keV) with the latest \nustar{} observations, (7) the warm Comptonization model needs an additional diskbb component to describe the source UV bump, (8) there is no correlation between the Eddington rate and the soft excess as found in other changing-look AGNs. We conclude that given the spectral variability in UV/X-rays, the ionized disk reflection or the warm Comptonization models may not be adequate to describe the vanishing soft excess feature observed in Mrk~590.