SIMBAD references

2015MNRAS.453.1946G - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 453, 1946-1964 (2015/October-3)

The X-ray luminosity function of active galactic nuclei in the redshift interval z=3-5.

GEORGAKAKIS A., AIRD J., BUCHNER J., SALVATO M., MENZEL M.-L., BRANDT W.N., McGREER I.D., DWELLY T., MOUNTRICHAS G., KOKI C., GEORGANTOPOULOS I., HSU L.-T., MERLONI A., LIU Z., NANDRA K. and ROSS N.P.

Abstract (from CDS):

We combine deep X-ray survey data from the Chandra observatory and the wide-area/shallow XMM-XXL field to estimate the active galactic nuclei (AGN) X-ray luminosity function in the redshift range z = 3-5. The sample consists of nearly 340 sources with either photometric (212) or spectroscopic (128) redshift in the above range. The combination of deep and shallow survey fields also provides a luminosity baseline of three orders of magnitude, LX(2-10keV) ~ 1043-1046ergs- 1 at z > 3. We follow a Bayesian approach to determine the binned AGN space density and explore their evolution in a model-independent way. Our methodology properly accounts for Poisson errors in the determination of X-ray fluxes and uncertainties in photometric redshift estimates. We demonstrate that the latter is essential for unbiased measurement of space densities. We find that the AGN X-ray luminosity function evolves strongly between the redshift intervals z = 3-4 and z = 4-5. There is also suggestive evidence that the amplitude of this evolution is luminosity dependent. The space density of AGN with LX(2-10keV) < 1045ergs- 1 drops by a factor of 5 between the redshift intervals above, while the evolution of brighter AGN appears to be milder. Comparison of our X-ray luminosity function with that of ultraviolet (UV)/optical selected quasi-stellar objects at similar redshifts shows broad agreement at bright luminosities, LX(2-10keV) > 1045ergs- 1. At fainter luminosities X-ray surveys measure higher AGN space densities. The faint-end slope of UV/optical luminosity functions, however, is steeper than for X-ray selected AGN. This implies that the Type I AGN fraction increases with decreasing luminosity at z > 3, opposite to trends established at lower redshift. We also assess the significance of AGN in keeping the hydrogen ionized at high redshift. Our X-ray luminosity function yields ionizing photon rate densities that are insufficient to keep the Universe ionized at redshift z > 4. A source of uncertainty in this calculation is the escape fraction of UV photons for X-ray selected AGN.

Abstract Copyright: © 2015 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2015)

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: active - quasars: general - galaxies: Seyfert - X-rays: diffuse background

Simbad objects: 5

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