This paper presents the X-ray spectroscopy of an X-ray selected sample of 25
radio-loud (RL) AGNs extracted from the XBSS sample. The main goal is to study
the origin of the X-ray spectral differences usually observed between
radio-loud and radio-quiet (RQ) AGNs. To this end, a comparison sample of 53 RQ
AGNs has been also extracted from the same XBSS sample and studied together
with the sample of RL AGNs. We have focused the analysis on the distribution of
the X-ray spectral indices of the power-law component that models the large
majority of the spectra in both samples. We find that the mean X-ray energy
spectral index is very similar in the 2 samples and close to alpha_X~1.
However, the intrinsic distribution of the spectral indices is significantly
broader in the sample of RL AGNs. In order to investigate the origin of this
difference, we have divided the RL AGNs into blazars and ``non-blazars'', on
the basis of the available optical and radio information. We find strong
evidence that the broad distribution observed in the RL AGN sample is mainly
due to the presence of the blazars. Furthermore, within the blazar class we
have found a link between the X-ray spectral index and the value of the
radio-to-X-ray spectral index suggesting that the observed X-ray emission is
directly connected to the emission of the relativistic jet. This trend is not
observed among the ``non-blazars'' RL AGNs. This favours the hypothesis that,
in these latter sources, the X-ray emission is not significantly influenced by
the jet emission and it has probably an origin similar to the RQ AGNs. Overall,
the results presented here indicate that the observed distribution of the X-ray
spectral indices in a given sample of RL AGNs is strongly dependent on the
amount of relativistic beaming present in the selected sources.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&