9–12 Oct 2018
Milan
Europe/Rome timezone

The X-ray properties of z~6 quasars

12 Oct 2018, 10:45
15m

Speaker

Riccardo Nanni (INAF - OAS Bologna )

Description

More than 200 quasars (QSOs) with spectroscopic redshift z > 6 have been discovered so far.
Multi-wavelength observations showed that these QSOs are evolved systems with large black hole masses (10$^{8-10}$ M$_{\odot}$), and their broad-band spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and rest-frame NIR/optical/UV spectra have not significantly evolved over cosmic time.
The formation of their Super Massive Black Holes in less than 1 Gyr is still a challenge for theory, with many simulations claiming they formed at the center of primordial overdense regions.
I report the study of all the 29 z$\sim$6 QSOs observed so far with X-rays, in which our group concluded that the X-ray spectral properties of high-z QSOs do not differ significantly from those of QSOs at lower-z.
We also obtained a deep 500 ks Chandra observation to study the environment around the QSO J1030+0524, which shows the best evidence of an overdense region around a z$\sim$6 QSO. This is the deepest X-ray observation ever achieved for a z$\sim$6 QSO. Comparing our results with those from previous XMM observation we found a hardening of the X-ray spectrum and a decrease of the flux by a factor 2.5. This is the first evidence of a variable QSO at such high redshift. I also report the discovery of a diffuse X-ray emission southward the QSO, that could be linked to the feedback of the AGN.

Affiliation INAF - OASBo

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