Luminosity-dependent unification of Active Galactic Nuclei and the X-ray Baldwin effect
Claudio Ricci, Stephane Paltani, Hisamitsu Awaki, Pierre-Olivier, Petrucci, Yoshihiro Ueda, Murray Brightman

TL;DR
This study investigates the X-ray Baldwin effect in active galactic nuclei, proposing that a luminosity-dependent decrease in the torus covering factor explains the observed anti-correlation between iron line strength and luminosity.
Contribution
It demonstrates through simulations that the luminosity-dependent unification model can account for the X-ray Baldwin effect across different luminosity regimes.
Findings
The model reproduces the observed slope of the EW-luminosity relation in Seyfert galaxies.
A slower decrease of the torus covering factor explains the effect in quasar regimes.
Simulations support the hypothesis that torus geometry influences the X-ray Baldwin effect.
Abstract
The existence of an anti-correlation between the equivalent width (EW) of the narrow core of the iron Kalpha line and the luminosity of the continuum (i.e. the X-ray Baldwin effect) in type-I active galactic nuclei has been confirmed over the last years by several studies carried out with XMM-Newton, Chandra and Suzaku. However, so far no general consensus on the origin of this trend has been reached. Several works have proposed the decrease of the covering factor of the molecular torus with the luminosity (in the framework of the luminosity-dependent unification models) as a possible explanation for the X-ray Baldwin effect. Using the fraction of obscured sources measured by recent X-ray and IR surveys as a proxy of the half-opening angle of the torus, and the recent Monte-Carlo simulations of the X-ray radiation reprocessed by a structure with a spherical-toroidal geometry by Ikeda et…
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