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Chandra and Magellan /FIRE follow-up observations of PSO167???13: An X-ray weak QSO at z = 6.515

Authors :
Franz E. Bauer
Chiara Mazzucchelli
Roberto Decarli
Bin Luo
Gianni Zamorani
Ohad Shemmer
Enrico Congiu
Nico Cappelluti
Thomas Connor
Eduardo Bañados
Riccardo Nanni
Andrea Comastri
M. Mignoli
Simona Gallerani
Federica Ricci
Francesco Calura
Marcella Brusa
Francesca Civano
Fabio Vito
Roberto Gilli
W. N. Brandt
Cristian Vignali
Vito, F.
Brandt, W. N.
Ricci, F.
Congiu, E.
Connor, T.
Ba??ados, E.
Bauer, F. E.
Gilli, R.
Luo, B.
Mazzucchelli, C.
Mignoli, M.
Shemmer, O.
Vignali, C.
Calura, F.
Comastri, A.
Decarli, R.
Gallerani, S.
Nanni, R.
Brusa, M.
Cappelluti, N.
Civano, F.
Zamorani, G.
Banados, E.
Brandt, W.N.
Bañados, E.
Bauer, F.E.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The discovery of hundreds of QSOs in the first Gyr of the Universe powered by already grown SMBHs challenges our knowledge of SMBH formation. In particular, investigations of $z>6$ QSOs presenting notable properties can provide unique information on the physics of fast SMBH growth in the early universe. We present the results of follow-up observations of the $z=6.515$ radio-quiet QSO PSO167-13, which is interacting with a close companion galaxy. The PSO167-13 system has been recently proposed to host the first heavily obscured X-ray source at high redshift. We observed PSO167-13 with Chandra/ACIS-S (177 ks), and obtained new spectroscopic observations (7.2 h) with Magellan/FIRE. No significant X-ray emission is detected from the PSO167-13 system, suggesting that the obscured X-ray source previously tentatively detected was either due to a strong background fluctuation or is highly variable. The upper limit (90% confidence level) on the X-ray emission of PSO167-13 ($L_{2-10\,\mathrm{keV}}6$ QSO. The ratio between the X-ray and UV luminosity of $\alpha_{ox}6$ times weaker than the expectation based on its UV luminosity. The new Magellan/FIRE spectrum of PSO167-13 is strongly affected by the unfavorable sky conditions, but the tentatively detected C IV and Mg II emission lines appear strongly blueshifted. The most plausible explanations for the X-ray weakness of PSO167-13 are intrinsic weakness or small-scale absorption by Compton-thick material. The possible strong blueshift of its emission lines hints at the presence of nuclear winds, which could be related to its X-ray weakness.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication on A&A

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....16523afa9dadc887d817fbd9f4d70da7