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2021A&A...653A.158L - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 653A, 158-158 (2021/9-1)

The most luminous blue quasars at 3.0 < z < 3.3. II. C IV/X-ray emission and accretion disc physics.

LUSSO E., NARDINI E., BISOGNI S., RISALITI G., GILLI R., RICHARDS G.T., SALVESTRINI F., VIGNALI C., BARGIACCHI G., CIVANO F., ELVIS M., FABBIANO G., MARCONI A., SACCHI A. and SIGNORINI M.

Abstract (from CDS):

We analyse the properties of the high-ionisation CIVλ1549 broad emission line in connection with the X-ray emission of 30 bright, optically selected quasars at z≃3.0-3.3 with pointed XMM-Newton observations, which were selected to test the suitability of active galactic nuclei as cosmological tools. In our previous work, we found that a large fraction (≃25%) of the quasars in this sample are X-ray under-luminous by factors of >3-10. As absorbing columns of ≥1023cm–2 can be safely ruled out, their weakness is most likely intrinsic. Here we explore possible correlations between the UV and X-ray features of these sources to investigate the origin of X-ray weakness with respect to X-ray-normal quasars at similar redshifts. We fit the UV spectra from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey of the quasars in our sample and analyse their CIV properties - for example equivalent width (EW) and line peak velocity (υpeak) - as a function of the X-ray photon index and 2-10keV flux. We confirm the statistically significant trends of CIVυpeak and EW with UV luminosity at 2500Å for both X-ray-weak and X-ray-normal quasars, as well as the correlation between X-ray weakness (parametrised through Δαox) and CIV EW. In contrast to some recent work, we do not observe any clear relation between the 2-10keV luminosity and υpeak. We find a statistically significant correlation between the hard X-ray flux and the integrated CIV flux for X-ray-normal quasars, which extends across more than three (two) decades in CIV (X-ray) luminosity, whilst X-ray-weak quasars deviate from the main trend by more than 0.5dex. We argue that X-ray weakness might be interpreted in a starved X-ray corona picture associated with an ongoing disc-wind phase. If the wind is ejected in the vicinity of the black hole, the extreme-UV radiation that reaches the corona will be depleted, depriving the corona of seed photons and generating an X-ray-weak quasar. Nonetheless, at the largest UV luminosities (>1047erg/s) there will still be an ample reservoir of ionising photons that can explain the 'excess' CIV emission observed in the X-ray-weak quasars with respect to normal sources of similar X-ray luminosities.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO 2021

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: active - quasars: general - quasars: supermassive black holes - methods: statistical

Simbad objects: 34

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