Exploring X-ray and radio emission of type 1 AGN up to z ~ 2.3
L. Ballo (1), F.J.H. Heras (1), X. Barcons (1), F.J. Carrera (1) ((1), IFCA/CSIC-UC, Spain)

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between X-ray and radio emissions in a large sample of type 1 AGN up to redshift 2.3, revealing that radio emission is closely linked to accretion processes and not strongly bimodal.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the origin of radio emission in AGN, showing its correlation with X-ray emission and challenging the idea of a clear bimodal radioloudness distribution.
Findings
Radio-loud AGN are also X-ray loud, with higher X-ray-to-optical ratios.
The radioloudness distribution is not bimodal in the sample.
Radio emission likely originates near the accretion disk, linked to X-ray emission.
Abstract
X-ray emission from AGN is dominated by the accretion disk around a SMBH. The radio luminosity, however, has not such a clear origin except in the most powerful sources where jets are evident. The origin (and even the very existence) of the local bi-modal distribution in radioloudness is also a debated issue. By analysing X-ray, optical and radio properties of a large sample of type 1 AGN up to z>2, where the bulk of this population resides, we aim to explore the interplay between radio and X-ray emission in AGN, in order to further our knowledge on the origin of radio emission, and its relation to accretion. We analyse a large (~800 sources) sample of type 1 AGN and QSOs selected from the 2XMMi X-ray source catalogue, cross-correlated with the SDSS DR7 spectroscopic catalogue, covering a redshift range from z~0.3 to z~2.3. SMBH masses are estimated from the Mg II emission line,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Statistics Education and Methodologies
