Discovery of a relation between black hole mass and soft X-ray time lags in active galactic nuclei
B. De Marco, G. Ponti, M. Cappi, M. Dadina, P. Uttley, E. M. Cackett,, A. C. Fabian, G. Miniutti

TL;DR
This study systematically analyzes X-ray time lags in active galactic nuclei, revealing a strong correlation between soft lag characteristics and black hole mass, suggesting a universal mass-scaling law for these phenomena.
Contribution
It uncovers a new mass-scaling relation for soft X-ray lags in AGN, including previously unreported sources, supporting their origin in the innermost regions near black holes.
Findings
15 out of 32 AGN show significant soft X-ray lags.
Soft lag properties correlate with black hole mass.
New soft lag sources identified, expanding known sample.
Abstract
We carried out a systematic analysis of time lags between X-ray energy bands in a large sample (32 sources) of unabsorbed, radio quiet active galactic nuclei (AGN), observed by XMM-Newton. The analysis of X-ray lags (up to the highest/shortest frequencies/time-scales), is performed in the Fourier-frequency domain, between energy bands where the soft excess (soft band) and the primary power law (hard band) dominate the emission. We report a total of 15 out of 32 sources displaying a high frequency soft lag in their light curves. All 15 are at a significance level exceeding 97 per cent and 11 are at a level exceeding 99 per cent. Of these soft lags, 7 have not been previously reported in the literature, thus this work significantly increases the number of known sources with a soft/negative lag. The characteristic time-scales of the soft/negative lag are relatively short (with typical…
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