XMM Follow-Up Observations of Three Swift BAT-Selected Active Galactic Nuclei
M. L. Trippe, C. S. Reynolds, M. Koss, R. F. Mushotzky, and L. M., Winter

TL;DR
This study used XMM-Newton to follow up on Swift BAT-selected AGN candidates, revealing most are not Compton-thick and highlighting discrepancies between X-ray and optical classifications, challenging simple AGN unification models.
Contribution
It provides new X-ray and optical observations that clarify the nature of candidate Compton-thick AGN and questions the straightforward unified model of AGN structure.
Findings
Most flat-spectrum BAT AGN are not Compton-thick.
X-ray spectra show Compton-thin absorption and soft excess.
Optical spectra differ significantly despite similar X-ray properties.
Abstract
We present XMM-Newton observations of three AGN taken as part of a hunt to find very heavily obscured Compton-thick AGN. For obscuring columns greater than 10^25 cm^-2, AGN are only visible at energies below 10 keV via reflected/scattered radiation, characterized by a flat power-law. We therefore selected three objects (ESO 417-G006, IRAS 05218-1212, and MCG -01-05-047) from the Swift BAT hard X-ray survey catalog with Swift X-ray Telescope XRT 0.5-10 keV spectra with flat power-law indices as candidate Compton-thick sources for follow-up observations with the more sensitive instruments on XMM-Newton. The XMM spectra, however, rule out reflection-dominated models based on the weakness of the observed Fe K-alpha lines. Instead, the spectra are well-fit by a model of a power-law continuum obscured by a Compton-thin absorber, plus a soft excess. This result is consistent with previous…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
