Can we measure the accretion efficiency of Active Galactic Nuclei?
S. I. Raimundo (1), A. C. Fabian (1), R. V. Vasudevan (2), P. Gandhi, (3), Jianfeng Wu (4) ((1) Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, (2), University of Maryland, (3) ISAS, JAXA, (4) Penn State University)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the challenges of accurately measuring the accretion efficiency of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) by exploring various methods to estimate bolometric luminosity and accretion rates, highlighting observational limitations and proposing solutions.
Contribution
The study evaluates different approaches to determine AGN bolometric luminosity and accretion efficiency, addressing uncertainties and proposing targeted observational strategies.
Findings
Efficiency trend with black hole mass may be an artefact.
Methods to estimate accretion efficiency vary with data quality.
Targeted multi-wavelength observations improve accuracy.
Abstract
The accretion efficiency for individual black holes is very difficult to determine accurately. There are many factors that can influence each step of the calculation, such as the dust and host galaxy contribution to the observed luminosity, the black hole mass and more importantly, the uncertainties on the bolometric luminosity measurement. Ideally, we would measure the AGN emission at every wavelength, remove the host galaxy and dust, reconstruct the AGN spectral energy distribution and integrate to determine the intrinsic emission and the accretion rate. In reality, this is not possible due to observational limitations and our own galaxy line of sight obscuration. We have then to infer the bolometric luminosity from spectral measurements made in discontinuous wavebands and at different epochs. In this paper we tackle this issue by exploring different methods to determine the…
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