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Accurate classification of 29 objects detected in the 39 months Palermo Swift/BAT hard X-ray catalogue

Authors :
Parisi, P.
Masetti, N.
Jiménez-Bailón, E.
Chavushyan, V.
Palazzi, E.
Landi, R.
Malizia, A.
Bassani, L.
Bazzano, A.
Bird, A. J.
Charles, P. A.
Galaz, G.
Mason, E.
McBride, V. A.
Minniti, D.
Morelli, L.
Schiavone, F.
Ubertini, P.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Through an optical campaign performed at 4 telescopes located in the northern and the southern hemispheres, plus archival data from two on-line sky surveys, we have obtained optical spectroscopy for 29 counterparts of unclassified or poorly studied hard X-ray emitting objects detected with Swift/BAT and listed in the 39 months Palermo catalogue. All these objects have also observations taken with Swift/XRT or XMM-EPIC which not only allow us to pinpoint their optical counterpart, but also to study their X-ray spectral properties (column density, power law photon index and F2-10 keV flux). We find that 28 sources in our sample are AGN; 7 are classified as type 1 while 21 are of type 2; the remaining object is a galactic cataclysmic variable. Among our type 1 AGN, we find 5 objects of intermediate Seyfert type (1.2-1.9) and one Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy; for 4 out of 7 sources, we have been able to estimate the central black hole mass. Three of the type 2 AGN of our sample display optical features typical of the LINER class and one is a likely Compton thick AGN. All galaxies classified in this work are relatively nearby objects since their redshifts lie in the range 0.008-0.075; the only galactic object found lies at an estimated distance of 90 pc. We have also investigated the optical versus X-ray emission ratio of the galaxies of our sample to test the AGN unified model. For them, we have also compared the X-ray absorption (due to gas) with the optical reddening (due to dust): we find that for most of our sources, specifically those of type 1.9-2.0 the former is higher than the latter confirming early results by Maiolino et al. (2001); this is possibly due to the properties of dust in the circumnuclear obscuring torus of the AGN.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1206.5091
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201219192