BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey -- XIII. The nature of the most luminous obscured AGN in the low-redshift universe
Rudolf E. B\"ar, Benny Trakhtenbrot, Kyuseok Oh, Michael J. Koss, O., Ivy Wong, Claudio Ricci, Kevin Schawinski, Anna K. Weigel, Lia F. Sartori,, Kohei Ichikawa, Nathan J. Secrest, Daniel Stern, Fabio Pacucci, Richard, Mushotzky, Meredith C. Powell, Federica Ricci, Eleonora Sani

TL;DR
This study analyzes the properties of the most luminous obscured AGN in the low-redshift universe, revealing their host galaxy types, diverse radio luminosities, and the role of radiation pressure in obscuration.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-wavelength characterization of high-luminosity obscured AGN, highlighting their host galaxy properties and the influence of radiation pressure on obscuration.
Findings
Most sources are hosted in massive, elliptical galaxies.
Radio luminosities vary widely, broader than lower-luminosity AGN.
Obscuration is likely influenced by radiation pressure on circumnuclear gas.
Abstract
We present a multi wavelength analysis of 28 of the most luminous low-redshift narrow-line, ultra-hard X-ray selected active galactic nuclei (AGN) drawn from the 70 month Swift/BAT all-sky survey, with bolometric luminosities of log(L_bol/erg/s) > 45.25. The broad goal of our study is to determine whether these objects have any distinctive properties, potentially setting them aside from lower-luminosity obscured AGN in the local Universe. Our analysis relies on the first data release of the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS/DR1) and on dedicated observations with the VLT, Palomar, and Keck observatories. We find that the vast majority of our sources agree with commonly used AGN selection criteria which are based on emission line ratios and on mid-infrared colours. Our AGN are predominantly hosted in massive galaxies (9.8 < log(M_*/M_sun) < 11.7); based on visual inspection of archival…
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