Absorption Properties and Evolution of Active Galactic Nuclei
G. Hasinger (1, 2) ((1) MPE Garching, (2) IfA Hawaii)

TL;DR
This study analyzes a large sample of AGN to understand how their absorption properties vary with luminosity and redshift, revealing evolutionary trends and implications for galaxy co-evolution.
Contribution
It provides a detailed statistical analysis of AGN absorption evolution with luminosity and redshift, offering new insights into AGN feeding mechanisms and cosmic downsizing.
Findings
Absorbed fraction decreases from ~80% to ~20% with increasing luminosity.
Absorbed fraction increases with redshift, following a power law up to z~2.
Results improve understanding of AGN evolution and galaxy co-evolution.
Abstract
Intrinsic absorption is a fundamental physical property to understand the evolution of active galactic nuclei (AGN). Here a sample of 1290 AGN, selected in the 2-10 keV band from different flux-limited surveys with very high optical identification completeness is studied. The AGN are grouped into two classes, unabsorbed (type-1) and absorbed (type-2), depending on their optical spectroscopic classification and X-ray absorption properties, using hardness ratios. Utilizing the optical to X-ray flux ratios, a rough correction for the ~8% redshift incompleteness still present in the sample is applied. A strong decrease of the absorbed fraction with X-ray luminosity is found. This can be represented by an almost linear decrease from ~80% to ~20% in the luminosity range log L_X=42-46 and is consistent with similar derivations in the optical and MIR bands. A significant increase of the…
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