5,110 research outputs found
On the Exotic Hard X-ray Source Populations in the Hellas2XMM survey
Recent hard X-ray surveys have proven to be effective in discovering large
numbers of X-ray sources that, despite the likely association with active
nuclei, appear to be characterized by "peculiar" properties. Among these
"exotic" source populations, we will focus on the nature of two classes of hard
X-ray sources: those characterized by high X-ray-to-optical flux ratios -- a
fraction of these are associated with the rather elusive Type 2 quasars -- and
the X-ray bright optically normal galaxies, also known as XBONGs.Comment: On behalf of the HELLAS2XMM Collaboration, 6 pages, 4 figures,
contribution to the Proceedings of the COSPAR Scientific Assembly, E1.3
"High-Energy Radiation from Black Holes: from Supermassive Black Holes to
Galactic Solar Mass Black Holes", Paris (France), July 18-25, 2004, accepted
for publication in Advances in Space Researc
Restless Quasar Activity: From BeppoSAX to Chandra and XMM-Newton
We briefly review some of the progress made in the last decade in the study
of the X-ray properties of the quasar population from the luminous, local
objects observed by BeppoSAX to the large, rapidly increasing population of z>4
quasars detected by Chandra and XMM-Newton in recent years.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. To appear in the Proceedings of the Symposium
"The Restless High-Energy Universe", 5-8 May 2003, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands, E.P.J. van den Heuvel, J.J.M. in 't Zand, and R.A.M.J. Wijers
Ed
The z>4 Quasar Population Observed by Chandra and XMM-Newton
The current status of our Chandra and XMM-Newton project on high-redshift
(z>4) quasars is briefly reviewed. We report the main results obtained in the
last few years for the detected quasars, along with a few (~10%) intriguing
cases where no detection has been obtained with Chandra snapshot observations.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in the proceedings of 'Multiwavelength AGN
surveys' (Cozumel, December 8-12 2003), ed. R. Maiolino and R. Mujic
On the X-ray Properties of OH Megamaser Sources: Chandra Snapshot Observations
We present Chandra snapshot observations for a sample of 7 sources selected
from the Arecibo OH megamaser (OHM) survey at z~0.13-0.22 and with far-infrared
luminosities in excess of 10^{11} L_sun. In contrast with the known H2O
megamasers, which are mostly associated with powerful Active Galactic Nuclei
(AGN), the situation is far less clear for OHMs, which have been poorly studied
in the X-ray band thus far. All of the observed sources are X-ray weak, with
only one OHM, IRAS FSC 03521+0028 (z=0.15), being detected by Chandra (with 5
counts). The results from this pilot program indicate that the X-ray emission,
with luminosities of less than ~10^{42} erg/s, is consistent with that from
star formation (as also suggested in some cases by the optical spectra) and
low-luminosity AGN emission. If an AGN is present, its contribution to the
broad-band emission of OHM galaxies is likely modest. Under reasonable
assumptions about the intrinsic X-ray spectral shape, the observed count
distribution from stacking analysis suggests absorption of ~10^{22} cm^{-2}.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Broad-band X-ray analysis of local mid-infrared selected Compton-thick AGN candidates
The estimate of the number and space density of obscured AGN over cosmic time
still represents an open issue. While the obscured AGN population is a key
ingredient of the X-ray background synthesis models and is needed to reproduce
its shape, a complete census of obscured AGN is still missing. Here we test the
selection of obscured sources among the local 12-micron sample of Seyfert
galaxies. Our selection is based on a difference up to three orders of
magnitude in the ratio between the AGN bolometric luminosity, derived from the
spectral energy distribution (SED) decomposition, and the same quantity
obtained by the published XMM-Newton 2-10 keV luminosity.
The selected sources are UGC05101, NGC1194 and NGC3079 for which the
available X-ray wide bandpass, from Chandra and XMM-Newton plus NuSTAR data,
extending to energies up to ~30-45 keV, allows us an accurate determination of
the column density, and hence of the true intrinsic power.
The newly derived NH values clearly indicate heavy obscuration (about 1.2,
2.1 and 2.4 x10^{24} cm-2 for UGC05101, NGC1194 and NGC3079, respectively) and
are consistent with the prominent silicate absorption feature observed in the
Spitzer-IRS spectra of these sources (at 9.7 micron rest frame). We finally
checked that the resulting X-ray luminosities in the 2-10 keV band are in good
agreement with those derived from the mid-IR band through empirical L_MIR-L_X
relations.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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