Molecular lines as tracers of Compton-thick AGN ?
I. Georgantopoulos (OABO/INAF), E. Rovilos (MPE), A. Akylas (NOA), E., Xilouris (NOA)

TL;DR
This study evaluates whether molecular line diagnostics can effectively identify Compton-thick AGN by comparing molecular line ratios with X-ray observations, finding the method efficient but not comprehensive.
Contribution
It demonstrates that molecular line ratios can be used to select heavily obscured AGN, validated by X-ray spectral analysis, with implications for future multi-wavelength surveys.
Findings
Four candidate Compton-thick AGN identified via X-ray spectroscopy.
Half of these candidates fall within the high dust obscuration molecular line region.
The method is effective but does not detect all Compton-thick AGN.
Abstract
Recently, Papadopoulos et al., 2010 using sub-mm CO molecular line observations of nearby ultra-luminous IRAS galaxies, (U)LIRGs, have found that exceptionally large gas column densities (N_H > 10^25 cm-2) can be present across some of the very dense gaseous disks that are typically found in these objects. They also proposed a diagnostic for finding such sources using CO and HCN molecular lines. Given that such high column densities are expected to absorb any X-ray luminous AGN, yielding Compton-thick sources, we set out toexplore whether this can be discerned using X-ray observations. More specifically we examine X-ray spectral observations of 14 sources in their sample, using public Chandra observations (0.5-10 keV) for eleven sources as well as BeppoSAX results (2-100 keV) from the literature for another three sources. Our goal is to find candidate Compton-thick AGN and to check…
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