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Spectral energy distributions of hard X-ray selected active galactic nuclei in the XMM-Newton Medium Deep Survey

Authors :
Polletta, M.
Tajer, M.
Maraschi, L.
Trinchieri, G.
Lonsdale, C. J.
Chiappetti, L.
Andreon, S.
Pierre, M.
Le Fèvre, O.
Zamorani, G.
Maccagni, D.
Garcet, O.
Surdej, J.
Franceschini, A.
Alloin, D.
Shupe, D. L.
Surace, J. A.
Fang, F.
Rowan-Robinson, M.
Smith, H. E.
Tresse, L.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

We present the SEDs of a hard X-ray selected sample containing 136 sources with F_(2-10 keV) > 10^(-14) erg cm^(-2) s^(-1); 132 are AGNs. The sources are detected in a 1 deg^2 area of the XMM-Newton Medium Deep Survey where optical data from the VVDS and CFHTLS and infrared data from the SWIRE survey are available. Based on a SED fitting technique we derive photometric redshifts with σ(1 + z) = 0.11 and 6% of outliers and identify AGN signatures in 83% of the objects. This fraction is higher than derived when a spectroscopic classification is available. The remaining 17^(+9)_(-6)% of AGNs show star-forming galaxy SEDs (SF class). The sources with AGN signatures are divided in two classes, AGN1 (33^(+6)_(-1)%) and AGN2 (50^(+6)_(-11)%). The AGN1 and AGN2 classes include sources whose SEDs are fitted by type 1 and type 2 AGN templates, respectively. On average, AGN1s show soft X-ray spectra, consistent with being unabsorbed, while AGN2s and SFs show hard X-ray spectra, consistent with being absorbed. The analysis of the average SEDs as a function of X-ray luminosity shows a reddening of the infrared SEDs, consistent with a decreasing contribution from the host galaxy at higher luminosities. The AGNs in the SF classes are likely obscured in the mid-infrared, as suggested by their low L_(3-20 μm)/L^(corr)_(0.5-10 keV) ratios. We confirm the previously found correlation for AGNs between the radio luminosity and the X-ray and the mid-infrared luminosities. The X-ray-radio correlation can be used to identify heavily absorbed AGNs. However, the estimated radio fluxes for the missing AGN population responsible for the bulk of the background at E > 10 keV are too faint to be detected even in the deepest current radio surveys.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..88eb5af52f953c3c7da4f9e7a2fd48b1