Measuring Black Hole Spin using X-ray Reflection Spectroscopy
Christopher S. Reynolds (Maryland)

TL;DR
This review discusses the use of X-ray reflection spectroscopy to measure black hole spins across different mass ranges, highlighting current results, best practices, and future prospects with relativistic reverberation techniques.
Contribution
It consolidates existing measurements of black hole spins using X-ray reflection spectroscopy, emphasizing methodological best practices and recent discoveries in relativistic reverberation.
Findings
Most supermassive black holes are rapidly spinning.
Reflection and continuum-fitting spin measures generally agree.
Detection of broad iron line reverberation supports strong gravity studies.
Abstract
I review the current status of X-ray reflection (a.k.a. broad iron line) based black hole spin measurements. This is a powerful technique that allows us to measure robust black hole spins across the mass range, from the stellar-mass black holes in X-ray binaries to the supermassive black holes in active galactic nuclei. After describing the basic assumptions of this approach, I lay out the detailed methodology focusing on "best practices" that have been found necessary to obtain robust results. Reflecting my own biases, this review is slanted towards a discussion of supermassive black hole (SMBH) spin in active galactic nuclei (AGN). Pulling together all of the available XMM-Newton and Suzaku results from the literature that satisfy objective quality control criteria, it is clear that a large fraction of SMBHs are rapidly-spinning, although there are tentative hints of a more slowly…
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