Revisiting the X-ray-to-UV relation of Quasars in the era of all-sky surveys
Maria Chira, Antonis Georgakakis, Angel Ruiz, Shi-Jiang Chen, Johannes Buchner, Amy L. Rankine, Elias Kammoun, Catarina Aydar, Mara Salvato, Andrea Merloni, Mirko Krumpe

TL;DR
This study analyzes the X-ray to UV luminosity relation in quasars across a large sample, revealing a mild redshift evolution and challenging previous assumptions about Eddington ratio dependence, with implications for accretion physics.
Contribution
It introduces a hierarchical Bayesian framework for analyzing quasar luminosity relations, providing new insights into their redshift evolution and dependence on accretion parameters.
Findings
Confirmed a tight, sublinear X-ray to UV luminosity correlation.
Detected a mild redshift evolution with the relation flattening at higher redshift.
Found no significant dependence on Eddington ratio.
Abstract
The X-ray--to--UV relation of active galactic nuclei (AGNs), commonly parametrized via the monochromatic luminosities at and , reflects the energetic interplay between the accretion disc and the X-ray-emitting corona, and is key for understanding accretion physics. Previous studies suggest that disc-dominated emission becomes more prominent with increasing optical luminosity. However, the redshift evolution of this relation remains debated, and a dependence on Eddington ratio, predicted by accretion flow models, is still observationally unconstrained. We revisit this relation using a large, nearly all-sky sample by combining the SDSS DR16Q QSO catalogue with X-ray data from XMM-Newton and the SRG/eROSITA All-Sky Survey DR1, yielding 136,745 QSOs at redshifts . We introduce a hierarchical Bayesian framework that treats X-ray detections and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
