SWIRE J161102.22+550551.6 , the SIMBAD biblio

2009A&A...498...67L - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 498, 67-81 (2009/4-4)

Revealing X-ray obscured quasars in SWIRE sources with extreme mid-IR/optical flux ratios.

LANZUISI G., PICONCELLI E., FIORE F., FERUGLIO C., VIGNALI C., SALVATO M. and GRUPPIONI C.

Abstract (from CDS):

Recent works have suggested that selection criteria based on mid-IR properties, i.e. extreme colors and bright flux levels, can be used to reveal a population of dust-enshrouded, extremely-luminous quasars at z∼1-2. However, the X-ray spectral properties of these intriguing objects still remain largely unexplored. We have performed an X-ray study of a large sample of bright mid-IR (F24µm>1.3mJy) galaxies showing an extreme MIR/Optical flux ratio (F24µm/FR>2000) in order to confirm the presence of a luminous active nucleus in these very red objects. Sampling of a large area is required to pick up objects at the highest luminosities given their low surface density. Accordingly, we have applied our selection criteria to an area of ∼6deg2 covered by XMM-Newton/Chandra observations within the ∼50deg2 SWIRE survey, resulting in a final sample of 44 objects. The vast majority of the source redshifts, both spectroscopic and photometric, are in the range 0.7 ≲ z ≲ 2.5. The X-ray coverage of the sample is highly inhomogeneous (from snap-shot 5ks Chandra observations to medium-deep XMM-Newton exposures of 70ks) and, consequently, a sizable fraction of them (≃43%) remains undetected in the 0.5-10keV band. Using spectral or hardness information we were able to estimate the value of the absorbing column density in 23 sources. 95% of them are consistent with being obscured by neutral gas with an intrinsic column density of NH≥1022cm–2. Remarkably, we also find that ∼55% of these sources can be classified as type 2 quasars on the basis of their absorption properties and X-ray luminosity. Moreover, most of the X-ray undetected sources show extreme mid-IR colors, consistent with being luminous AGN-powered objects, suggesting they might host heavily obscured (possibly Compton-thick) quasars in X-rays. This demonstrates that our selection criteria applied to a wide area survey is very efficient in finding a large number of type 2 quasars at z>1. The existence of this class of very powerful, obscured quasars at high z could have important implications in the context of the formation and cosmological evolution of accreting supermassive black holes and their host galaxies.

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Journal keyword(s): galaxies: active - galaxies: high-redshift - galaxies: nuclei - infrared: galaxies - X-rays: galaxies

Nomenclature: Table 1, col(2): SWIRE JHHMMSS.ss+DDMMSS.s N=44.

CDS comments: Table 1, col(1): numbering NN is not used in SIMBAD, objects are SWIRE JHHMMSS.ss+DDMMSS.s.

Simbad objects: 57

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