The Third Catalog of Active Galactic Nuclei Detected by the Fermi Large Area Telescope
M. Ackermann, M. Ajello, W. Atwood, L. Baldini, J. Ballet, G., Barbiellini, D. Bastieri, J. Gonzalez, R. Bellazzini, E. Bissaldi, R., Blandford, E. Bloom, R. Bonino, E. Bottacini, T. Brandt, J. Bregeon, R., Britto, P. Bruel, R. Buehler, S. Buson, G. Caliandro, R. Cameron, M.

TL;DR
This paper presents the third catalog of active galactic nuclei detected by the Fermi-LAT, expanding the known gamma-ray AGN population, especially blazars, and analyzing their spectral properties and distribution.
Contribution
It provides an updated, comprehensive catalog of gamma-ray detected AGNs, including new detections and detailed spectral classifications, enhancing understanding of their properties and distribution.
Findings
1563 AGNs at high Galactic latitudes are identified, mostly blazars.
About half of the new blazars are of unknown type due to limited spectroscopic data.
The properties of the AGN sample confirm previous findings and suggest faint blazars can emit detectable gamma rays.
Abstract
The third catalog of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) detected by the Fermi-LAT (3LAC) is presented. It is based on the third Fermi-LAT catalog (3FGL) of sources detected between 100 MeV and 300 GeV with a Test Statistic (TS) greater than 25, between 2008 August 4 and 2012 July 31. The 3LAC includes 1591 AGNs located at high Galactic latitudes (|b|>10{\deg}), a 71% increase over the second catalog based on 2 years of data. There are 28 duplicate associations, thus 1563 of the 2192 high-latitude gamma-ray sources of the 3FGL catalog are AGNs. Most of them (98%) are blazars. About half of the newly detected blazars are of unknown type, i.e., they lack spectroscopic information of sufficient quality to determine the strength of their emission lines. Based on their gamma-ray spectral properties, these sources are evenly split between flat-spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs) and BL~Lacs. The most…
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