Relativistic reflection in the average X-ray spectrum of AGN in the V\'eron-Cetty & V\'eron catalogue
S. Falocco (1,2), F. J. Carrera (2), X. Barcons (2), G. Miniutti (3),, A. Corral (4) ((1) University Federico II, (2) Instituto de F\'isica de, Cantabria (CSIC-UC), (3) Centro de Astrobiolog\'ia (CSIC-INTA), Dep. de, Astrof\'isica, ESAC, Villanueva de la Ca\~nada

TL;DR
This study analyzes the average X-ray spectrum of unabsorbed AGN, revealing significant relativistic reflection from the accretion disk and distant neutral reflection, with implications for understanding matter distribution around supermassive black holes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed detection and quantification of both relativistic and distant reflection components in the average AGN X-ray spectrum, including relativistic effects.
Findings
Detection of distant neutral reflection at z=0.8
Relativistic disk reflection improves spectral fit at 6 sigma
Disk reflection accounts for about 70% of total reflected flux
Abstract
The X-ray spectra of active galactic nuclei (AGN) unveil properties of matter around the super massive black hole (SMBH). We investigate the X-ray spectra of AGN focusing on Compton reflection and fluorescence, important processes of interaction between primary radiation and circum-nuclear material. Unresolved emission lines (most notably the Fe line) in the X-ray spectra of AGN indicate that this material is located far away from the SMBH. Contributions from the inner accretion disk, affected by relativistic effects, have also been detected in several cases. We studied the average X-ray spectrum of a sample of 263 X-ray unabsorbed AGN that yield 419023 counts in the 2-12 keV rest-frame band distributed among 388 XMM-Newton spectra. We fitted the average spectrum using a (basically) unabsorbed power law (primary radiation). From second model that represents the interaction of the…
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