SRGAJ230631.0+155633: an extremely X-ray luminous, heavily obscured, radio-loud quasar at z=0.44 discovered by SRG/ART-XC

Abstract

We report on a detailed study of a luminous, heavily obscured (N H 2 × 1023 cm-2), radio-loud quasar SRGAJ230631.0+155633, discovered in the 4--12 keV energy band by the Mikhail Pavlinsky ART-XC telescope aboard the SRG observatory during the first two years of its all-sky X-ray survey in 2020--2021. The object is located at z=0.4389 and is a type 2 AGN according to optical spectroscopy (SDSS, confirmed by DESI). We combine radio-to-X-ray data, including near-simultaneous ART-XC and Swift/XRT observations conducted in June 2023. During these follow-up observations, the source was found in a significantly fainter but still very luminous state (L X=1.0+0.8-0.3 × 1045 erg s-1, absorption corrected, 2--10 keV) compared to its discovery during the all-sky survey (L X=6+6-3×1045 erg s-1), which indicates significant intrinsic variability on a rest-frame time scale of 1 year. The radio data show a complex morphology with a core and two extended radio lobes, indicating a giant FRII radio galaxy. From multi-wavelength photometry and the black hole-bulge relation we infer a bolometric luminosity of 6×1046 erg s-1 and a black hole mass of 1.4×109\,M, implying accretion at 30\% of the Eddington limit. SRGAJ230631.0+155633 proves to be one of the most luminous obscured quasars out to z=0.5. As such, it can serve as a valuable testbed for in-depth exploration of the physics of such objects, which were much more abundant in the younger Universe.

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