The hyperluminous Compton-thick z2 quasar nucleus of the hot DOG W1835+4355 observed by NuSTAR
Abstract
We present a 155ks NuSTAR observation of the z2 hot dust-obscured galaxy (hot DOG) W1835+4355. We extracted spectra from the two NuSTAR detectors and analyzed them jointly with the archival XMM PN and MOS spectra. We performed a spectroscopic analysis based on both phenomenological and physically motivated models employing toroidal and spherical geometry for the obscurer. In all the modelings, the source exhibits a Compton-thick column density N H 1024 cm-2, a 2-10 keV luminosity L2-10≈2×1045 erg s-1 , and a prominent soft excess (5-10 % of the primary radiative output), which translates into a luminosity 1044 erg s-1. We modeled the spectral energy distribution from 1.6 to 850 μ m using a clumpy two-phase dusty torus model plus a modified blackbody to account for emission powered by star formation in the far-infrared. We employed several geometrical configurations consistent with those applied in the X-ray analysis. In all cases we obtained a bolometric luminosity L bol≈3-5×1047 erg s-1, which confirms the hyperluminous nature of this active galactic nucleus. Finally, we estimate a prodigious star formation rate of 3000 M\,yr-1, which is consistent with the rates inferred for z≈2-4 hyperluminous type I quasars. The heavily obscured nature, together with L bol, the ratio of X-ray to mid-infrared luminosity, the rest-frame optical morphology, and the host star formation rate are indicative of its evolutionary stage. We can interpret this as a late-stage merger event in the transitional, dust-enshrouded, evolutionary phase eventually leading to an optically bright AGN.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.