Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash
102 tokens/sec
GPT-4o
59 tokens/sec
Gemini 2.5 Pro Pro
43 tokens/sec
o3 Pro
6 tokens/sec
GPT-4.1 Pro
50 tokens/sec
DeepSeek R1 via Azure Pro
28 tokens/sec
2000 character limit reached

The SRG/eROSITA All-Sky Survey: X-ray beacons at late cosmic dawn (2406.05118v2)

Published 7 Jun 2024 in astro-ph.GA and astro-ph.HE

Abstract: The SRG/eROSITA All-Sky Survey (eRASS) is expected to contain ~100 quasars that emitted their light when the universe was less than a billion years old, i.e. at z>5.6. By selection, these quasars populate the bright end of the AGN X-ray luminosity function and their count offers a powerful demographic diagnostic of the parent super-massive black hole population. Of the >~ 400 quasars that have been discovered at z>5.6 to date, less than 15 % have been X-ray detected. We present a pilot survey to uncover the elusive X-ray luminous end of the distant quasar population. We have designed a quasar selection pipeline based on optical, infrared and X-ray imaging data from DES DR2, VHS DR5, CatWISE2020 and the eRASS. The core selection method relies on SED template fitting. We performed optical follow-up spectroscopy with the Magellan/LDSS3 instrument for the redshift confirmation of a subset of candidates. We have further obtained a deeper X-ray image of one of our candidates with Chandra ACIS-S. We report the discovery of five new quasars in the redshift range 5.6 < z < 6.1. Two of these quasars are detected in eRASS and are by selection X-ray ultra-luminous. These quasars are also detected at radio frequencies. The first one is a broad absorption line quasar which shows significant X-ray dimming over 3.5 years, i.e. about 6 months in the quasar rest frame. The second radio-detected quasar is a jetted source with compact morphology. We show that a blazar configuration is likely for this source, making it the second most distant blazar known to date. With our pilot study, we demonstrate the power of eROSITA as a discovery machine for luminous quasars in the epoch of reionization. The X-ray emission of the two eROSITA detected quasars are likely to be driven by different high-energetic emission mechanisms a diversity which will be further explored in a future systematic full-hemisphere survey.

User Edit Pencil Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com
Authors (15)
  1. J. Wolf (61 papers)
  2. M. Salvato (239 papers)
  3. S. Belladitta (23 papers)
  4. R. Arcodia (30 papers)
  5. S. Ciroi (60 papers)
  6. F. Di Mille (34 papers)
  7. T. Sbarrato (30 papers)
  8. J. Buchner (53 papers)
  9. S. Hämmerich (8 papers)
  10. J. Wilms (311 papers)
  11. W. Collmar (7 papers)
  12. T. Dwelly (49 papers)
  13. A. Merloni (154 papers)
  14. T. Urrutia (46 papers)
  15. K. Nandra (126 papers)