Explaining the UV to X-ray correlation in AGN within the framework of X-ray illumination of accretion discs

Abstract

It is established that the ultraviolet (UV) and X-ray emissions in active galactic nuclei (AGN) are tightly correlated. This correlation is observed both in low- and high-redshift sources. In particular, observations of large samples of quasars revealed the presence of a non-linear correlation between UV and X-rays. The physical origin of this correlation is poorly understood. In this work, we explore this observed correlation in the framework of the X-ray illumination of the accretion disc by a central source. We have shown in previous works that this model successfully explains the continuum UV/optical time delays, variability, and the broadband spectral energy distribution in AGN. We use this model to produce 150,000 model SEDs assuming a uniform distribution of model parameters. We compute the corresponding UV ( 2500~A ) and X-ray (2 keV) monochromatic luminosities and select only the model data points that agree with the observed UV-to-X-ray correlation. Our results show that the X-ray illumination of accretion disc model can reproduce the observed correlation for a subset of model configurations with a non-uniform distribution of black hole mass (M BH), accretion rate (m/m Edd), and power transferred from the accretion disc to the corona (L transf/L disc). In addition, our results reveal the presence of a correlation between M BH and m/m Edd, and between m/m Edd and L transf/L disc, to explain the observed X-ray-UV correlation. We also present evidence based on observed luminosities supporting our findings. We finally discuss the implications of our results.

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