Abstract
To fully understand cosmic black hole growth, we need to constrain the population of heavily obscured active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at the peak of cosmic black hole growth (z ~1-3). Sources with obscuring column densities higher than 1024 atoms cm-2, called Compton-thick (CT) AGNs, can be identified by excess X-ray emission at ~20-30 keV, called the 'Compton hump'. We apply the recently developed Spectral Curvature (SC) method to high-redshift AGNs (2 < z < 5) detected with Chandra. This method parametrizes the characteristic 'Compton hump' feature cosmologically redshifted into the X-ray band at observed energies < 10 keV. We find good agreement in CT AGNs found using the SC method, and bright sources fit using their full spectrum with X-ray spectroscopy. In the Chandra Deep Field- South, we measure a CT fraction of 17 -11+19 per cent (3/17) for sources with observed luminosity > 5×1043erg s-1. In the Cosmological Evolution Survey (COSMOS), we find an observed CT fraction of 15 -3+4 per cent (40/272) or 32±11 per cent when corrected for the survey sensitivity. When comparing to low redshift AGNs with similar X-ray luminosities, our results imply that the CT AGN fraction is consistent with having no redshift evolution. Finally, we provide SC equations that can be used to find high-redshift CT AGNs (z > 1) for current (XMM-Newton) and future (eROSITA and ATHENA) X-ray missions.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Baronchelli, L., Koss, M., Schawinski, K., Cardamone, C., Civano, F., Comastri, A., … Treister, E. (2017). Inferring Compton-thick AGN candidates at z > 2 with Chandra using the > 8 keV rest-frame spectral curvature. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 471(1), 364–372. https://doi.org/10.1093/MNRAS/STX1561
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.