The paper links Fermi‑detected blazars and radio galaxies through their accretion and jet radiation mechanisms, analyzing 838 BL Lacs, 784 FSRQs, 55 LERGs and 17 HERGs. Gamma‑ray photon index versus luminosity separates BL Lacs from FSRQs and shows HERGs align with FSRQs while LERGs resemble BL Lacs. Using the distance‑independent Compton Dominance parameter, the authors identify a low‑accretion SSC regime for BL Lacs/LERGs and a high‑accretion EC regime for FSRQs/HERGs. The results bolster the unified AGN model, attributing observed differences largely to viewing angle.
Active galactic nuclei (AGN) remain a cornerstone of high‑energy astrophysics, with the Fermi Large Area Telescope providing unprecedented gamma‑ray data. By compiling a large, heterogeneous sample of blazars and radio galaxies, researchers can probe how intrinsic properties—particularly the rate at which matter accretes onto the central supermassive black hole—shape observable emission. The study’s statistical treatment of photon index versus luminosity confirms earlier hints that BL Lac objects and flat‑spectrum radio quasars occupy distinct regions of parameter space, reflecting fundamentally different radiative mechanisms.
A key innovation lies in the use of the Compton Dominance (CD) metric, which compares the inverse‑Compton peak to the synchrotron peak and is immune to distance‑related biases. The authors show that CD values cluster around two regimes: CD < 1 for BL Lacs and LERGs, indicative of synchrotron‑self‑Compton (SSC) processes driven by low accretion rates; and CD > 1 for FSRQs and HERGs, where external‑Compton (EC) scattering dominates, signalling higher accretion flows. This bifurcation provides a quantitative bridge between jet physics and the feeding habits of the central engine.
These findings reinforce the unified AGN model, suggesting that many apparent subclasses are simply the same objects viewed from different angles. Recognizing SSC‑dominated low‑accretion sources as the parent population of BL Lacs and EC‑dominated high‑accretion sources as the progenitors of FSRQs clarifies population synthesis models and improves predictions for future gamma‑ray missions. As surveys push to fainter flux limits, the CD parameter will become an essential tool for disentangling intrinsic AGN properties from observational selection effects, ultimately sharpening our understanding of jet formation and evolution.
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