X-ray observation of ULAS J1120+0641, the most distant quasar at z = 7.08
Jan 28, 20145 pages
Published in:
- Astron.Astrophys. 563 (2014) A46
- Published: Mar 5, 2014
e-Print:
- 1401.7223 [astro-ph.GA]
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Abstract: (EDP Sciences)
We probe the emission mechanism of the accreting super massive black holes in the high redshift Universe and, to do this, we study the X-ray spectrum of ULAS1120+064, the highest redshift quasar detected so far at z = 7.085, which has been deeply observed (340 ks) by XMM-Newton. Despite the long integration time, the spectral analysis is limited by the poor statistics, with only 150 source counts being detected. We measured the spectrum in the 2-80 keV rest-frame (0.3-10 keV observed) energy band. Assuming a simple power law model, we find a photon index of 2.0 +- 0.3 and a luminosity of 6.7 +- 0.3 x 10^44 ergs^-1 in the 2-10 keV band, while the intrinsic absorbing column can only be loosely constrained (N_H cm^-2). Combining our measure with published data, we calculate that the X-ray-to-optical spectral index alpha_OX is 1.8 +- 0.1, in agreement with the alpha_OX-UV luminosity correlation that is valid for lower redshift quasars. This is the second time that a z > 6 quasar has been investigated through a deep X-ray observation. In agreement with previous studies of z ~ 6 AGN samples, we do not find any hint of evolution in the broadband energy distribution. Indeed from our dataset, ULAS 1120+0641 is indistinguishable from the population of optically bright quasar at lower redshift.Note:
- 5 pages, 4 figures, A&A in press; updated with the accepted version
- quasars: supermassive black holes
- quasars: individual: ULAS J1120 + 0641
- early Universe
References(44)
Figures(4)