High-sensitivity wide-band X-ray spectroscopy is the key feature of the Suzaku X-ray observatory, launched on 2005 July 10. This paper summarizes the spacecraft, in-orbit performance, operations, and data processing that are related to observations. The scientific instruments, the high-throughput X-ray telescopes, X-ray CCD cameras, non-imaging hard X-ray detector are also described.
We report results on the broad iron emission line of the Seyfert galaxy
MCG-6-30-15, obtained from the second long ASCA observation in 1997. The
time-averaged profile of the broad line is very similar to that seen with ASCA
in 1994, so confirming the detailed model fit then obtained. A bright flare is
seen in the light curve, during which the continuum was soft. At that time the
emission line peaks around 5 keV and most of its emission is shifted below 6
keV with no component detected at 6.4 keV (EW<60 eV). This can be interpreted
as the result of an extraordinarily large gravitational redshift due to a
dominant flare occurring very close to the black hole at a radius of <5m.Comment: 5 pages, accepted or publication in MNRAS Letter
Suzaku has, for the first time, enabled the hard X-ray variability of the Seyfert 1 galaxy MCG-6-30-15 to be measured. The variability in the 14-45 keV band, which is dominated by a strong reflection hump, is quenched relative to that at a few keV. This directly demonstrates that the whole reflection spectrum is much less variable than the power-law continuum. The broadband spectral variability can be decomposed into two components -a highly variable power-law and constant reflection -as previously inferred from other observations in the 2-10 keV band. The strong reflection and high iron abundance give rise to a strong broad iron line, which requires the inner disc radius to be at about 2 gravitational radii. Our results are consistent with the predictions of the light bending model which invokes the very strong gravitational effects expected very close to a rapidly spinning black hole.
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