The X-ray and Mid-Infrared luminosities in Luminous Type 1 Quasars

Abstract

Several recent studies have reported different intrinsic correlations between the AGN mid-IR luminosity (LMIR) and the rest-frame 2-10 keV luminosity (LX) for luminous quasars. To understand the origin of the difference in the observed LX-LMIR relations, we study a sample of 3,247 spectroscopically confirmed type 1 AGNs collected from Bo\"otes, XMM-COSMOS, XMM-XXL-North, and the SDSS quasars in the Swift/XRT footprint spanning over four orders of magnitude in luminosity. We carefully examine how different observational constraints impact the observed LX-LMIR relations, including the inclusion of X-ray non-detected objects, possible X-ray absorption in type 1 AGNs, X-ray flux limits, and star formation contamination. We find that the primary factor driving the different LX-LMIR relations reported in the literature is the X-ray flux limits for different studies. When taking these effects into account, we find that the X-ray luminosity and mid-IR luminosity (measured at rest-frame 6μ m, or L6μ m) of our sample of type 1 AGNs follow a bilinear relation in the log-log plane: LX =(0.840.03)× L6μ m/1045 erg\;s-1 + (44.600.01) for L6μ m < 1044.79 erg\;s-1 , and LX = (0.400.03)× L6μ m/1045 erg\;s-1 +(44.510.01) for L6μ m ≥ 1044.79 erg\;s-1 . This suggests that the luminous type 1 quasars have a shallower LX-LMIR correlation than the approximately linear relations found in local Seyfert galaxies. This result is consistent with previous studies reporting a luminosity-dependent LX-LMIR relation, and implies that assuming a linear LX-LMIR relation to infer the neutral gas column density for X-ray absorption might overestimate the column densities in luminous quasars.

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