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Clustering of Obscured and Unobscured Quasars in the Boötes Field: Placing Rapidly Growing Black Holes in the Cosmic Web

Hickox, R.C.; Myers, A.D.; Brodwin, M.; Alexander, D.M.; Forman, W.R.; Jones, C.; Murray, S.S.; Brown, M.J.I.; Cool, R.J.; Kochanek, C.S.; Dey, A.; Jannuzi, B.T.; Eisenstein, D.; Assef, R.J.; Eisenhardt, P.R.; Gorjian, V.; Stern, D.; Le Floc'h, E.; Caldwell, N.; Goulding, A.D.; Mullaney, J.R.

Clustering of Obscured and Unobscured Quasars in the Boötes Field: Placing Rapidly Growing Black Holes in the Cosmic Web Thumbnail


Authors

R.C. Hickox

A.D. Myers

M. Brodwin

W.R. Forman

C. Jones

S.S. Murray

M.J.I. Brown

R.J. Cool

C.S. Kochanek

A. Dey

B.T. Jannuzi

D. Eisenstein

R.J. Assef

P.R. Eisenhardt

V. Gorjian

D. Stern

E. Le Floc'h

N. Caldwell

A.D. Goulding

J.R. Mullaney



Abstract

We present the first measurement of the spatial clustering of mid-infrared-selected obscured and unobscured quasars, using a sample in the redshift range 0.7 < z < 1.8 selected from the 9 deg2 Boötes multiwavelength survey. Recently, the Spitzer Space Telescope and X-ray observations have revealed large populations of obscured quasars that have been inferred from models of the X-ray background and supermassive black hole evolution. To date, little is known about obscured quasar clustering, which allows us to measure the masses of their host dark matter halos and explore their role in the cosmic evolution of black holes and galaxies. In this study, we use a sample of 806 mid-infrared-selected quasars and ≈250,000 galaxies to calculate the projected quasar-galaxy cross-correlation function wp (R). The observed clustering yields characteristic dark matter halo masses of log(M halo [h -1 M sun]) = 12.7+0.4 -0.6 and 13.3+0.3 -0.4 for unobscured quasars (QSO-1s) and obscured quasars (Obs-QSOs), respectively. The results for QSO-1s are in excellent agreement with previous measurements for optically selected quasars, while we conclude that the Obs-QSOs are at least as strongly clustered as the QSO-1s. We test for the effects of photometric redshift errors on the optically faint Obs-QSOs, and find that our method yields a robust lower limit on the clustering; photo-z errors may cause us to underestimate the clustering amplitude of the Obs-QSOs by at most ~20%. We compare our results to previous studies, and speculate on physical implications of stronger clustering for obscured quasars.

Citation

Hickox, R., Myers, A., Brodwin, M., Alexander, D., Forman, W., Jones, C., …Mullaney, J. (2011). Clustering of Obscured and Unobscured Quasars in the Boötes Field: Placing Rapidly Growing Black Holes in the Cosmic Web. Astrophysical Journal, 731(2), Article 117. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637x/731/2/117

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Apr 1, 2011
Deposit Date Apr 8, 2013
Publicly Available Date Mar 28, 2024
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Print ISSN 0004-637X
Electronic ISSN 1538-4357
Publisher American Astronomical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 731
Issue 2
Article Number 117
DOI https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637x/731/2/117
Keywords Galaxies, Active, Large-scale structure of universe, Quasars, Surveys.

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Copyright Statement
© 2011. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A.





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