Bibcode
Willott, C. J.; Simpson, C.; Almaini, O.; Manners, J. C.; Johnson, O.; Lawrence, A.; Dunlop, J. S.; Ivison, R. J.; Rawlings, S.; González-Solares, E.; Pérez-Fournon, I.; Serjeant, S.; Oliver, S. J.; Roche, N. D.; Mann, R. G.; Rowan-Robinson, M.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notice of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 339, Issue 2, pp. 397-409.
Fecha de publicación:
2
2003
Número de citas
30
Número de citas referidas
29
Descripción
The sources discovered in deep hard X-ray surveys with 2-8 keV fluxes of
S2-8˜ 10-14 erg cm-2
s-1 make up the bulk of the X-ray background at these
energies. Here we present detailed multiwavelength observations of three
such sources from the European Large-Area ISO Survey Deep X-ray Survey.
The observations include sensitive near-infrared spectroscopy with the
Subaru Telescope and X-ray spectral information from the Chandra X-ray
Observatory. The sources observed all have optical-to-near-infrared
(near-IR) colours redder than an unobscured quasar and comprise a
reddened quasar, a radio galaxy and an optically obscured active
galactic nucleus (AGN). The reddened quasar is at a redshift z = 2.61
and shows a very large X-ray absorbing column of NH≈ 3
× 1023 cm-2. This contrasts with the
relatively small amount of dust reddening, implying a gas-to-dust ratio
along the line of sight 100 times greater than that of the Milky Way.
The radio galaxy at z = 1.57 shows only narrow emission lines, but has a
surprisingly soft X-ray spectrum. The softness of this spectrum
indicates either an unusually low gas-to-dust ratio for the absorbing
medium or X-ray emission related to the young radio source. The host
galaxy is extremely red (R-K = 6.4) and its optical/near-IR spectrum is
best fit by a strongly reddened (AV ≈ 2) starburst. The
third X-ray source discussed is also extremely red (R-K = 6.1) and lies
in a close grouping of three other R-K > 6 galaxies. No emission or
absorption lines were detected from this object, but its redshift (and
that of one of the nearby galaxies) is constrained by spectral energy
distribution fitting to be just greater than z = 1. The extremely red
colours of these two galaxies can be accounted for by old stellar
populations. These observations illustrate the diverse properties of
hard X-ray-selected AGN at high redshift in terms of obscuration at
optical and X-ray wavelengths and the evolutionary states of their host
galaxies.