We present a uniform and systematic analysis of the 0.6-10 keV X-ray spectra
of radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN) observed by ASCA. The sample 10
BLRGs, 5 QSRs, 9 NLRGs, and 10 RGs. At soft X-rays, about half of the NLRGs and
all of the RGs exhibit a thermal plasma component, with a bimodal distribution
of temperatures and luminosities, suggesting an origin either in a surrounding
cluster or loose group or in a hot corona. At energies above 2 keV, a hard
power-law component is detected in 90% of cases. The power-law photon indices
and luminosities in BLRGs, QSRs, and NLRGs are similar, consistent with
orientation-based unification schemes. Significant excess cold absorption is
detected in most NLRGs, but also in some BLRGS and QSRs, which was somewhat
unexpected. In contrast to Seyfert galaxies, only one object showss the
signature of a warm absorber. The nuclear X-ray luminosity is correlated with
the luminosity of the [O III] emission line, the FIR emission at 12 microns,
and the lobe radio power at 5 GHz. The Fe K line is detected in 50% of BLRGs,
one QSR, and a handful of NLRGs. This sample also includes 6 Weak Line Radio
Galaxies (WLRGs). Their spectra WLRGs can be generally decomposed into a soft
thermal component with hard absrorbed power-law component, which is
significantly flatter than any other radio-loud AGNs. Their intrinsic
luminosities are two orders of magnitude lower than in other sources of the
sample. An interesting possibility is that WLRGs represent an extreme
population of radio galaxies in which the central black hole is accreting at a
rate well below the Eddington rate.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal. 72 pages, including many
tables and figures. Fig 1 is separate, in TIFF format. Postscript version of
fig 1 and postscript version of entire preprint can be obtained from
http://www.astro.psu.edu/users/mce/preprint_index.htm