High precision X-ray logN-logS distributions: implications for the obscured AGN population
S. Mateos, R.S. Warwick, F. J. Carrera, G.C. Stewart, J. Ebrero, R., Della Ceca, A. Caccianiga, R. Gilli, M.J. Page, E. Treister, J.A. Tedds, M.G., Watson, G. Lamer, R.D. Saxton, H. Brunner, C.G. Page

TL;DR
This study provides detailed measurements of X-ray source counts across multiple energy bands, revealing the contributions of different populations and challenging existing background synthesis models regarding obscured AGN predictions.
Contribution
The paper presents the largest complete X-ray source catalog to date, with detailed flux distributions across multiple bands, and compares these with models to refine understanding of AGN populations.
Findings
Detected a break in source count distributions in most energy bands.
Non-AGN populations contribute significantly at energies below 2 keV.
Models may overpredict faint absorbed AGN, indicating a need for parameter adjustments.
Abstract
We have constrained the extragalactic source count distributions over a broad range of X-ray fluxes and in various energy bands to test whether the predictions from X-ray background synthesis models agree with the observational constraints provided by our measurements. We have used 1129 XMM-Newton observations at |b|>20 deg covering a sky area of 132.3 deg^2 to compile the largest complete samples of X-ray objects to date in the 0.5-1 keV, 1-2 keV, 2-4.5 keV, 4.5-10 keV, 0.5-2 keV and 2-10 keV energy bands. Our survey includes in excess of 30,000 sources down to ~10^-15 erg/cm^2/s below 2 keV and down to ~10^{-14} erg/cm^2/s above 2 keV. A break in the source count distributions was detected in all energy bands except the 4.5-10 keV band. An analytical model comprising 2 power-law components cannot adequately describe the curvature seen in the source count distributions. The shape of…
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