X-ray properties of z>6.5 quasars

Abstract

We present XMM-Newton X-ray observations and analysis of three DES z>6.5 quasars (VDES J0020-3653 at z=6.824, VDES J0244-5008 at z=6.724 and VDES J0224-4711 at z=6.526) and six other quasars with 6.438 < z < 6.747 from the XMM-Newton public archive. Two of the nine quasars are detected at a high (>4σ) significance level: VDES J0224-4711(z=6.53) at 9σ and PSO J159-02 (z=6.38) at 8σ. They have a photon index of =1.82+0.29-0.27 and =1.94+0.31-0.29 respectively, which is consistent with the mean value of 1.9 found for quasars at all redshifts. The rest-frame 2-10 keV luminosity of VDES J0224-4711, is L2-10keV = (2.920.43)×1045\;erg\;s-1, which makes this quasar one of the most X-ray luminous quasars at z>5.5 and the most X-ray luminous quasar at z>6.5, with a luminosity 6 times and 2.5 times larger than ULAS J1120+0641 (z=7.08) and ULAS J1342+0928 (z=7.54) respectively. The X-ray-to-optical power-law slopes of the nine quasars are consistent with the previously observed anti-correlation of αox with UV luminosity L2500. We find no evidence for evolution of αox with redshift when the anti-correlation with UV luminosity is taken into account. Similar to previous studies at z6 we have found remarkably consistent X-ray spectral properties between low (z1) and high-redshift quasars. Our results add further evidence to the picture that the observable properties of high luminosity quasars over the UV to X-ray spectral region have not evolved significantly from z7 to the present day and that quasars comparable to local versions existed 800 million years after the big bang.

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