English

A Classic Type 2 QSO

Astrophysics 2008-11-26 v3

Abstract

In the Chandra Deep Field South 1Msec exposure we have found, at redshift 3.700 +- 0.005, the most distant Type 2 AGN ever detected. It is the source with the hardest X-ray spectrum with redshift z>3. The optical spectrum has no detected continuum emission to a 3sigma detection limit of ~3 10^{-19} ergs/s/cm^2/AA and shows narrow lines of Ly_alpha, CIV, NV, HeII, OVI, [OIII], and CIII]. Their FWHM line widths have a range of ~700-2300 km/s with an average of approximately ~1500 km/s. The emitting gas is metal rich (Z ~2.5-3 Z_solar). In the X-ray spectrum of 130 counts in the 0.5-7 keV band there is evidence for intrinsic absorption with N_H > 10^{24} cm^{-2}. An iron K_alpha line with rest frame energy and equivalent width of ~6.4 keV and ~1 keV, respectively, in agreement with the obscuration scenario, is detected at a 2sigma level. If confirmed by our forthcoming XMM observations this would be the highest redshift detection of FeK_alpha. Depending on the assumed cosmology and the X-ray transfer model, the 2-10 keV rest frame luminosity corrected for absorption is ~10^{45 +- 0.5} ergs/s, which makes our source a classic example of the long sought Type 2 QSOs. From standard population synthesis models, these sources are expected to account for a relevant fraction of the black-hole-powered QSO distribution at high redshift.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.astro-ph/0103198,
  title  = {A Classic Type 2 QSO},
  author = {C. Norman and G. Hasinger and R. Giacconi and R. Gilli and L. Kewley and M. Nonino and P. Rosati and G. Szokoly and P. Tozzi and J. Wang and W. Zheng and A. Zirm and J. Bergeron and R. Gilmozzi and N. Grogin and A. Koekemoer and E. Schreier},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:astro-ph/0103198},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

24 LaTeX pages including 6 postscript figures. Revised version, accepted by ApJ