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NuSTAR and XMM-Newton Observations of Luminous, Heavily Obscured, WISE-selected Quasars at z \~ 2

Stern, D.; Lansbury, G.B.; Assef, R.J.; Brandt, W.N.; Alexander, D.M.; Ballantyne, D.R.; Baloković, M.; Bauer, F.E.; Benford, D.; Blain, A.; Boggs, S.E.; Bridge, C.; Brightman, M.; Christensen, F.E.; Comastri, A.; Craig, W.W.; Del Moro, A.; Eisenhardt, P.R.M.; Gandhi, P.; Griffith, R.L.; Hailey, C.J.; Harrison, F.A.; Hickox, R.C.; Jarrett, T.H.; Koss, M.; Lake, S.; LaMassa, S.M.; Luo, B.; Tsai, C.-W.; Urry, C.M.; Walton, D.J.; Wright, E.L.; Wu, J.; Yan, L.; Zhang, W.W.

NuSTAR and XMM-Newton Observations of Luminous, Heavily Obscured, WISE-selected Quasars at z \~ 2 Thumbnail


Authors

D. Stern

G.B. Lansbury

R.J. Assef

W.N. Brandt

D.R. Ballantyne

M. Baloković

F.E. Bauer

D. Benford

A. Blain

S.E. Boggs

C. Bridge

M. Brightman

F.E. Christensen

A. Comastri

W.W. Craig

A. Del Moro

P.R.M. Eisenhardt

P. Gandhi

R.L. Griffith

C.J. Hailey

F.A. Harrison

R.C. Hickox

T.H. Jarrett

M. Koss

S. Lake

S.M. LaMassa

B. Luo

C.-W. Tsai

C.M. Urry

D.J. Walton

E.L. Wright

J. Wu

L. Yan

W.W. Zhang



Abstract

We report on a NuSTAR and XMM-Newton program that has observed a sample of three extremely luminous, heavily obscured WISE-selected active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at z ~ 2 across a broad X-ray band (0.1 – 79 keV). The parent sample, selected to be faint or undetected in the WISE 3.4 μm (W1) and 4.6 μm (W2) bands but bright at 12 μm (W3) and 22 μm (W4), are extremely rare, with only ~1000 so-called "W1W2-dropouts" across the extragalactic sky. Optical spectroscopy reveals typical redshifts of z ~ 2 for this population, implying rest-frame mid-IR luminosities of νL ν(6 μm) ~ 6 × 1046 erg s–1 and bolometric luminosities that can exceed L bol ~ 1014 L ☉. The corresponding intrinsic, unobscured hard X-ray luminosities are L(2-10 keV) ~ 4 × 1045 erg s–1 for typical quasar templates. These are among the most AGNs known, though the optical spectra rarely show evidence of a broad-line region and the selection criteria imply heavy obscuration even at rest-frame 1.5 μm. We designed our X-ray observations to obtain robust detections for gas column densities N H ≤ 1024 cm–2. In fact, the sources prove to be fainter than these predictions. Two of the sources were observed by both NuSTAR and XMM-Newton, with neither being detected by NuSTAR (f 3-24 keV lsim 10–13 erg cm–2 s–1), and one being faintly detected by XMM-Newton (f 0.5-10 keV ~ 5 × 10–15 erg cm–2 s–1). A third source was observed only with XMM-Newton, yielding a faint detection (f 0.5-10 keV ~ 7 × 10–15 erg cm–2 s–1). The X-ray data imply these sources are either X-ray weak, or are heavily obscured by column densities N H gsim 1024 cm–2. The combined X-ray and mid-IR analysis seems to favor this second possibility, implying the sources are extremely obscured, consistent with Compton-thick, luminous quasars. The discovery of a significant population of heavily obscured, extremely luminous AGNs would not conform to the standard paradigm of a receding torus, in which more luminous quasars are less likely to be obscured, and instead suggests that an additional source of obscuration is present in these extreme sources.

Citation

Stern, D., Lansbury, G., Assef, R., Brandt, W., Alexander, D., Ballantyne, D., …Zhang, W. (2014). NuSTAR and XMM-Newton Observations of Luminous, Heavily Obscured, WISE-selected Quasars at z \~ 2. Astrophysical Journal, 794(2), Article 102. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637x/794/2/102

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 23, 2014
Publication Date Oct 20, 2014
Deposit Date May 15, 2015
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 794
Issue 2
Article Number 102
DOI https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637x/794/2/102
Keywords Galaxies: active, Quasars: individual (WISEA J181417.29+341224.8, WISEA J220743.82+193940.1, WISEA J235710.82+032802).
Related Public URLs http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2014ApJ...794..102S

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Copyright Statement
© 2014. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A.





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