# Compton-thick AGNs in the NuSTAR era. V: Joint NuSTAR and XMM-Newton   spectral analysis of three "soft-Gamma" candidate CT-AGNs in the Swift-BAT   100-month catalog

**Authors:** Stefano Marchesi, Marco Ajello, Xiurui Zhao, Andrea Comastri,, Valentina La Parola, Alberto Segreto

arXiv: 1907.09193 · 2019-09-25

## TL;DR

This study uses combined NuSTAR and XMM-Newton data to reclassify three candidate Compton-thick AGNs from the Swift-BAT catalog, revealing that many are actually Compton-thin and identifying a rare high-redshift CT quasar.

## Contribution

It demonstrates the importance of high-quality spectral data in accurately classifying AGNs and corrects previous misidentifications in the Swift-BAT catalog.

## Key findings

- Two sources reclassified from CT to Compton thin.
- Identification of a rare CT quasar at z>0.1.
-  Improved spectral analysis clarifies AGN classifications.

## Abstract

We present the joint NuSTAR and XMM-Newton spectral analysis in the 0.6-70 keV band of three candidate Compton thick (CT-) AGN selected in the 100-month Swift-BAT catalog. These objects were previously classified as CT-AGNs based on low quality Swift-XRT and Swift-BAT data, and had soft photon indices (Gamma>2.2) that suggested a potential overestimation of the line of sight column density. Thanks to the high-quality NuSTAR and XMM-Newton data we were able to determine that in all three objects the photon index was significantly overestimated, and two out of three sources are reclassified from CT to Compton thin, confirming a previously observed trend, i.e., that a significant fraction of BAT-selected, candidate CT-AGNs with poor soft X-ray data are reclassified as Compton thin when the NuSTAR data are added to the fit. Finally, thanks to both the good XMM-Newton spatial resolution and the high NuSTAR and XMM-Newton spectral quality, we found that the third object in our sample was associated to the wrong counterpart: the correct one, 2MASX J10331570+5252182, has redshift z=0.14036, which makes it one of the very few candidate CT-AGNs in the 100-month BAT catalog detected at z>0.1, and a rare CT quasar.

## Full text

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## Figures

15 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.09193/full.md

## References

50 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.09193/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.09193