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NuSTAR Observations of Heavily Obscured Quasars at z ~ 0.5

Authors :
Lansbury, G. B.
Alexander, D. M.
Del Moro, A.
Gandhi, P.
Assef, R. J.
Stern, D.
Aird, J.
Ballantyne, D. R.
Balokovic, M.
Bauer, F. E.
Boggs, S. E.
Brandt, W. N.
Christensen, F. E.
Craig, W. W.
Elvis, M.
Grefenstette, B. W.
Hailey, C. J.
Harrison, F. A.
Hickox, R. C.
Koss, M.
LaMassa, S. M.
Luo, B.
Mullaney, J. R.
Teng, S. H.
Urry, C. M.
Zhang, W. W.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

We present NuSTAR hard X-ray (3-79 keV) observations of three Type 2 quasars at z ~ 0.4-0.5, optically selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Although the quasars show evidence for being heavily obscured Compton-thick systems on the basis of the 2-10 keV to [OIII] luminosity ratio and multiwavelength diagnostics, their X-ray absorbing column densities (N_H) are poorly known. In this analysis: (1) we study X-ray emission at >10 keV, where X-rays from the central black hole are relatively unabsorbed, in order to better constrain N_H; (2) we further characterize the physical properties of the sources through broad-band near-UV to mid-IR spectral energy distribution (SED) analyses. One of the quasars is detected with NuSTAR at >8 keV with a no-source probability of <0.1%, and its X-ray band ratio suggests near Compton-thick absorption with N_H \gtrsim 5 x 10^23 cm^-2. The other two quasars are undetected, and have low X-ray to mid-IR luminosity ratios in both the low energy (2-10 keV) and high energy (10-40 keV) X-ray regimes that are consistent with extreme, Compton-thick absorption (N_H \gtrsim 10^24 cm^-2). We find that for quasars at z ~ 0.5, NuSTAR provides a significant improvement compared to lower energy (<10 keV) Chandra and XMM-Newton observations alone, as higher column densities can now be directly constrained.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1402.2666
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/785/1/17