1 / 18

X-ray selected z>3 QSOs in the XMM-COSMOS field

X-ray selected z>3 QSOs in the XMM-COSMOS field. Marcella Brusa (MPE). The XMM-COSMOS and COSMOS teams .. and in particular:

jeff
Download Presentation

X-ray selected z>3 QSOs in the XMM-COSMOS field

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. X-ray selected z>3 QSOs in the XMM-COSMOS field Marcella Brusa (MPE) The XMM-COSMOS and COSMOS teams .. and in particular: A. Comastri, R. Gilli, G. Hasinger, K. Iwasawa, V. Mainieri,M. Mignoli, M. Salvato, G. ZamoraniA. Bongiorno, N. Cappelluti, F. Civano, F. Fiore, A. Merloni, J. Silverman, J. Trump, C. Vignali, P. Capak, M. Elvis, O. Ilbert, C. Impey, S. Lilly Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  2. Why high-z AGNs are interesting? locally: MBH~0.0013MBulge SDSS QSO z>6 => MBH~3-7109MSun (Willott +03)  Either M~1012MSunbulges are in place at z>6 or the MBH-Bulges-properties relationships must break down at high-z Forming (enough) 109-10MSun BHs and (possibly) 1012MSun Bulges at z>6 can be a challenge for models of structure formation. As well as forming metals and dust. Strong constraints on cosmological models adapted from Ferrarese & Merritt 2000, Gebhardt et al. 2000 Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  3. X-rays from High-z QSOs 1990-1994: pioneering works with ROSAT Wilkes+92 Elvis+94 Bechtold+94 (record QSO z=4) 2002-2005: Chandra/XMM contribution Follow-up of optically SDSS QSOs Brandt+02 Mathur+02 Vignali+03,05 (record QSO z=6.4) 2015-2020: XEUS … ? record z = 10? Vignali+05 Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  4. The population of z>3 QSO • Radio QSO • (Wall et al., 2005) • Optical QSOs • (Schmidt+95, Fan+01,04, • Richards+06) • Exponential decline in space density • at z=2.7 • X-ray: What happens at z>3? • decline or ~costant ? • Soft X-ray ROSAT/Chandra/ XMM • (Hasinger, Miyaji & Schmidt 2005) • Chandra/ROSAT • (Silverman et al. 2005/2008) • statistics still low at z~3-5 (NO statistics at z>6) XMM Chandra ROSAT ? eROSITA XEUS Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  5. 1608 soft 0.5-2.0 keV 1103 medium 2.0-4.5 keV 250 hard 4.5-10.0 keV Cosmos Survey 2deg2 (PI: N. Scoville) with deep multiwavelength coverage at all lambda XMM-COSMOS survey (PI: G. Hasinger) Mosaic of 55 XMM observations, 1.4 Ms ~35 ks average One of the main goal: “Characterization of The z>3 QSO population” Hasinger+07, Cappelluti+07 See poster by Nico Cappelluti Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  6. z>3 QSO counts: expectations at S(0.5-2 keV) >1e-15 cgs Predictions: (from XRB models Gilli, Comastri & Hasinger 07) unabs+abs 30 deg-2(exponential cutoff at z.2.7) Schmidt et al. 1995 80 deg-2(constant evolution extrapolating Hasinger+05 / La Franca+05 LF) Models from Gilli+07 Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  7. XMM-COSMOS sources redshifts compilation from ongoing spectroscopic projects[IMACS/Magellan+VLT/ESO + SDSS + literature data] • Flux limited sample (50% of the area coverage in at least one band) at 10-15 cgs • 1651 XMM sources <10% problematic ID thanks to IR+Chandra info • ~670 “secure” spectroscopic redshifts (40%) • Incompleteness especially for high-z and Type 2 AGN Blue = BL AGN Black = ALL AGN (adapted from Brusa et al. 2007 ApJS) Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  8. AGN photometric redshifts Photo-z computed using >30 bands: SDSS, Subaru including IB, CFHT, J, K, IRAC.. • LESS than 10% catastrophic outliers • (to be compared with • COMBO-17, Wolf et al. 2004) Salvato et al. (in prep) Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  9. AGN redshift distribution in XMM-COSMOS X-ray sample (AGN) Empty: specz+photz Filled: specz z>3 sample: 40 objects (22 specz + 18 photoz) Additional 14 objects, no photoz available. Candidates very high-z AGN (EXOs, Koekemoer et al. 2004) Brusa et al. ApJ submitted Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  10. BALQSO QSO2? QSO2 BALQSO Optical spectra (from VIMOS and IMACS) Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  11. Photometric redshifts Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  12. General properties Magnitude distribution: I=20-26 (25% I>24) Luminosities distribution: Log(Lx) = 44 - 45 ACS image, 15”x15” I=23.5 Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  13. Optical colors Color color selection v-I vs. b-v (proposed, e.g. in Casey et al. 2008, Siana et al. 2007) Lower-z (0-2) Interm-z (2-3) High-z (>3) locus 8 objects would not have been selected ~40 (magenta/yellow) contaminants Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  14. X-ray properties logNH<23 HR vs. redshift logNH>23 logNH<23, BL logNH<23 NOT BL • Ratio of obscured/unobscured objects is ~20% Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  15. Contribution to source counts Lower bound: 22 spectro-z Upper-bound: adding 10 EXOs Dashed line: Expectations from XRB models extrapolating Hasinger+05 LF Solid line: Exponential decay introduced at z=2.7 (Schmidt+95) Flat evolution completely ruled out Tightest constraints to date (largest and cleanest sample) Models: Gilli, Comastri & Hasinger 2007, A&A Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  16. Space densities Red curve: predictions logLx>44.2 AGN (unobs+obs) [Gilli+07 using Hasinger+05 and La Franca+05] Dashed area: (rescaled) space density for optically selected bright QSO [Richards+2006, Fan+2001] Blue curve: Silverman+08 LF, I<24 sample Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  17. Summary • Results based only on XMM-COSMOS selection and exploitation of COSMOS database (no need to combine with other X-ray surveys… ) • Flat evolution at z>3 definitively ruled out(space densities & number counts) • 32/40 (80%) X-ray selected quasars would have been selected also by optical color-color criteria (but with a comparable number of low-z contaminants) not a significant population with unusual optical colors… • Sizable sample of obscured AGN (BAL, NL..) Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

  18. What’s next? • High-z quasars:  eROSITA (high-L) ~2500 z>3 QSOs in the “Deep survey”: 400 deg2 on “north+south pole”, F(0.5-2) > 4e-15 cgs ~25000 z>3 QSOs in the All Sky survey: 30.000 deg2 all sky, F(0.5-2) > 1e-14 cgs  XEUS (low-L and very high-redshift)  joint multiwavelength campaigns Synergies with other (big) observatories is mandatory… - PanSTARRS (all sky) + GROND (for faintest sources) - SDSS-like survey? LAMOST ? - (ESO facilities can be used on 200 deg2 – South pole) - LBT/GTC deep U+Bband imaging (on 200 deg2…) - CFHTLS Wide Survey ~100 deg2 (u,g,r,i,z) AB~25-26 Granada - X-ray Universe 2008

More Related