A Tight Correlation Between Millimeter and X-ray Emission in Accreting Massive Black Holes from <100 Milliarcsecond-resolution ALMA Observations
Claudio Ricci, Chin-Shin Chang, Taiki Kawamuro, George Privon, Richard, Mushotzky, Benny Trakhtenbrot, Ari Laor, Michael J. Koss, Krista L. Smith,, Kriti K. Gupta, Georgios Dimopoulos, Susanne Aalto, Eduardo Ros

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a nearly universal correlation between millimeter and X-ray emissions in accreting supermassive black holes, enabling new methods to estimate obscuration and detect binary SMBHs using high-resolution ALMA observations.
Contribution
The paper provides high-resolution ALMA observations showing a tight correlation between 100GHz and X-ray emissions in radio-quiet AGN, suggesting new ways to estimate obscuration and identify binary SMBHs.
Findings
High detection rate of nuclear mm emission in AGN (94%)
Strong correlation between 100GHz and X-ray luminosities
Potential to identify heavily obscured and binary SMBHs
Abstract
Recent studies have proposed that the nuclear millimeter continuum emission observed in nearby active galactic nuclei (AGN) could be created by the same population of electrons that gives rise to the X-ray emission that is ubiquitously observed in accreting black holes. We present the results of a dedicated high spatial resolution (60-100 milliarcsecond) ALMA campaign on a volume-limited ( Mpc) sample of 26 hard X-ray ( keV) selected radio-quiet AGN. We find an extremely high detection rate (25/26 or ), which shows that nuclear emission at mm-wavelengths is nearly ubiquitous in accreting SMBHs. Our high-resolution observations show a tight correlation between the nuclear (1-23 pc) 100GHz and the intrinsic X-ray emission (1 scatter of dex). The ratio between the 100GHz continuum and the X-ray emission does not show any correlation with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Advanced X-ray Imaging Techniques
