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Discovery of the most X-ray luminous quasar SRGE J170245.3+130104 at redshift z$\approx5.5$

Authors :
Khorunzhev, G. A.
Meshcheryakov, A. V.
Medvedev, P. S.
Borisov, V. D.
Burenin, R. A.
Krivonos, R. A.
Uklein, R. I.
Shablovinskaya, E. S.
Afanasyev, V. L.
Dodonov, S. N.
Sunyaev, R. A.
Sazonov, S. Yu.
Gilfanov, M. R.
Source :
Astronomy Letters 2021, volume 47,Number 3, pages 155-173
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

SRGE J170245.3+130104 was discovered by the eROSITA telescope aboard the SRG space observatory on March 13-15, 2020 during the first half-year scan of its all-sky X-ray survey. The optical counterpart of the X-ray source was photometrically identified as a distant quasar candidate at $z\approx5.5$. Follow-up spectroscopic observations, done in August/September 2020 with the SCORPIO-II instrument at the BTA 6-m telescope, confirmed that SRGE J170245.3+130104 is a distant quasar at redshift z=5.466. The X-ray luminosity of the quasar during the first half-year scan of the eROSITA all-sky survey was $3.6^{+2.1}_{-1.5}\times 10^{46}$ erg/s (in the 2-10 keV energy range), whereas its X-ray spectrum could be described by a power law with a slope of $\Gamma=1.8^{+0.9}_{-0.8}$. Six months later (September 13-14, 2020), during the second half-year scan of the eROSITA all-sky survey, the quasar was detected again and its X-ray luminosity had decreased by a factor of 2 (at the $\approx 1.9\sigma$ confidence level). The SRGE J170245.3+130104 proves to be the most X-ray luminous among all known X-ray quasars at $z>5$. It is also one of the radio-loudest distant quasars (with radio-loudness $R\sim10^3$), which may imply that it is a blazar. In the Appendix, we present the list of all $z>5$ quasars detected in X-rays to date.<br />Comment: Preprint: Original russian text: Pis'ma v Astronomichesky Zhurnal 2021, volume 47,Number 3, pages 155-173

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Astronomy Letters 2021, volume 47,Number 3, pages 155-173
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2104.05142
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063773721030026