The AGN nature of 11 out of 12 Swift/RXTE unidentified sources through optical and X-ray spectroscopy
R. Landi, N. Masetti, L. Morelli, E. Palazzi, L. Bassani, A. Malizia,, A. Bazzano, A.J. Bird, A.J. Dean, G. Galaz, D. Minniti, P. Ubertini

TL;DR
This study uses optical and X-ray spectroscopy to classify 12 high-energy sources, revealing that most are absorbed AGNs, including potential Compton-thick sources, thereby improving understanding of their nature and distribution.
Contribution
First optical classifications of 8 Swift/BAT and RXTE sources, with refined data for others, enhancing the identification and understanding of high-energy sources.
Findings
8 out of 11 AGNs are absorbed with NH > 10^{22} cm^{-2}
Up to 3 objects could be Compton thick, with strong evidence for one
Optical spectroscopy provided classifications and distance estimates
Abstract
The Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) is performing a high Galactic latitude survey in the 14-195 keV band at a flux limit of ~10^{-11} erg cm^{-2} s^{-1}, leading to the discovery of new high energy sources, most of which have not so far been properly classified. A similar work has also been performed with the RXTE slew survey leading to the discovery of 68 sources detected above 8 keV, many of which are still unclassified. Follow-up observations with the Swift X-ray Telescope (XRT) provide, for many of these objects, source localization with a positional accuracy of few arcsec, thus allowing the search for optical counterparts to be more efficient and reliable. We present the results of optical/X-ray follow-up studies of 11 Swift BAT detections and one AGN detected in the RXTE Slew Survey, aimed at identifying their counterparts and at assessing their nature. These data allowed, for…
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