We report on Chandra observations of a sample of 11 optically luminous (MB ~4 quasars known and hence represent ideal witnesses of the end of the ``dark age.'' Nine quasars are detected by Chandra, with ~2-57 counts in the observed 0.5-8 keV band. These detections increase the number of X-ray-detected AGNs at z>~4 to ~90 overall, Chandra has detected ~85% of the high-redshift quasars observed with snapshot (few kilosecond) observations. PSS 1506+5220, one of the two X-ray-undetected quasars, displays a number of notable features in its rest-frame ultraviolet spectrum, the most prominent being broad, deep Si IV and C IV absorption lines. The average optical-to-X-ray spectral index for the present sample ( =-1.88+/-0.05) is steeper than that typically found for z>~4 quasars but consistent with the expected value from the known dependence of this spectral index on quasar luminosity. We present joint X-ray spectral fitting for a sample of 48 radio-quiet quasars in the redshift range 3.99-6.28 for which Chandra observations are available. The X-ray spectrum (~870 counts) is well parameterized by a power law with Γ=1.93+0.10-0.09 in the rest-frame ~2-40 keV band, and a tight upper limit of NH~5×1021 cm-2 is obtained on any average intrinsic X-ray absorption. There is no indication of any significant evolution in the X-ray properties of quasars between redshifts 0 and 6, suggesting that the physical processes of accretion onto massive black holes have not changed over the bulk of cosmic time.
CITATION STYLE
Vignali, C., Brandt, W. N., Schneider, D. P., & Kaspi, S. (2005). X-Ray Lighthouses of the High-Redshift Universe. II. Further Snapshot Observations of the Most Luminous z ≳4 Quasars with Chandra. The Astronomical Journal, 129(6), 2519–2530. https://doi.org/10.1086/430217
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