Average Fe K-alpha emission from distant AGN
A. Corral, M.J. Page, F.J. Carrera, X. Barcons, S. Mateos, J. Ebrero,, M. Krumpe, A. Schwope, J.A. Tedds, M.G. Watson

TL;DR
This study measures the average iron K-alpha emission from a large sample of distant AGN, finding a narrow line at 6.4 keV with no significant broad relativistic component, informing models of black hole accretion efficiency.
Contribution
Developed a novel method to compute mean X-ray spectra from large AGN samples without complex individual spectral fitting, enabling robust detection of iron emission features.
Findings
Detected a narrow Fe K-alpha line at 6.4 keV with 99.9% significance.
Found no significant broad relativistic line in the average spectrum.
Observed a weaker iron line in higher luminosity AGN consistent with the Iwasawa-Taniguchi effect.
Abstract
One of the most important parameters in the XRB (X-ray background) synthesis models is the average efficiency of accretion onto SMBH (super-massive black holes). This can be inferred from the shape of broad relativistic Fe lines seen in X-ray spectra of AGN (active galactic nuclei). Several studies have tried to measure the mean Fe emission properties of AGN at different depths with very different results. We compute the mean Fe emission from a large and representative sample of AGN X-ray spectra up to redshift ~ 3.5. We developed a method of computing the rest-frame X-ray average spectrum and applied it to a large sample (more than 600 objects) of type 1 AGN from two complementary medium sensitivity surveys based on XMM-Newton data, the AXIS and XWAS samples. This method makes use of medium-to-low quality spectra without needing to fit complex models to the individual spectra but with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle accelerators and beam dynamics · Magnetic confinement fusion research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
