Searching for highly obscured AGN in the XMM-Newton serendipitous source catalog
A. Corral (1), I. Georgantopoulos (1), M.G. Watson (2), S.R. Rosen, (2), E. Koulouridis (1), K.L. Page (2), P. Ranalli (1), G.Lanzuisi (1), G., Mountrichas (1), A. Akylas (1), G.C. Stewart (2), J.P. Pye (2) ((1) IAASARS, (NOA, Greece), (2) Department of Physics & Astronomy

TL;DR
This study develops an automated X-ray spectral analysis method to identify highly obscured active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the XMM-Newton catalog, successfully finding numerous candidates including potential Compton-thick AGN.
Contribution
It introduces a new automated spectral selection technique for detecting highly obscured AGN using X-ray data, improving identification efficiency.
Findings
Identified 81 highly obscured AGN candidates from the XMM-Newton catalog.
Confirmed 28 of these as heavily absorbed with column densities >10^{23} cm^{-2}.
Discovered 15 candidate Compton-thick AGN with N_H > 10^{24} cm^{-2}.
Abstract
The majority of active galactic nuclei (AGN) are obscured by large amounts of absorbing material that makes them invisible at many wavelengths. X-rays, given their penetrating power, provide the most secure way for finding these AGN. The XMM-Newton serendipitous source catalog is the largest catalog of X-ray sources ever produced; it contains about half a million detections. These sources are mostly AGN. We have derived X-ray spectral fits for very many 3XMM-DR4 sources ( 114 000 observations, corresponding to 77 000 unique sources), which contain more than 50 source photons per detector. Here, we use a subsample of 1000 AGN in the footprint of the SDSS area (covering 120 deg) with available spectroscopic redshifts. We searched for highly obscured AGN by applying an automated selection technique based on X-ray spectral analysis that is capable of efficiently…
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