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New insights on the distant AGN population

Published 31 May 2013 in astro-ph.CO | (1306.0047v1)

Abstract: Current X-ray surveys have proved to be essential tools in order to identify and study AGNs across cosmic time. However, there is evidence that the most heavily obscured AGNs are largely missing even in the deepest surveys. The search for these obscured AGNs is one of the most outstanding issues of extragalactic astronomy, since they are expected to make a major contribution to the high energy peak of the X-ray background (XRB) and might constitute a particularly active and dusty phase of black hole and galaxy evolution. Using a newly developed SED fitting technique to decompose the AGN from the star-formation emission in the infrared band we identify a sample of 17 IR bright quasars at z=1-3. For the majority of these sources the X-ray spectrum is well characterised by an absorbed power law model, revealing that ~25% of the sources are unabsorbed; the remainder of these IR quasars have moderate-to-high absorption (N_H>1023 cm-2), and ~25% are not detected in the X-rays and are likely to be Compton thick (N_H>1024 cm-2). We therefore find a much higher fraction of obscured than unobscured quasars, indicating that a large fraction of the luminous black hole accretion was very heavily obscured at z~2.

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